A couple of qestions

Discussion in 'HortForum' started by Initial M, Mar 29, 2005.

  1. Initial M

    Initial M Member

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    Hi,

    I am new to gardening and I got a couple of questions.
    #1 When a venus fly trap goes dormat should you cut the dead leaves off or keep them on?

    #2 I just reviced some jade cuttings and I was told to put them in water so they can root. I was wondering if this is the best method to start a jade plant. And if it is not the best method what do I do to start a jade plant?

    Thanks
    -Mark Hopkin
     
  2. Junglekeeper

    Junglekeeper Esteemed Contributor 10 Years

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    I don't see a problem with leaving the dead leaves in place. They'll slowly decay as they would do so naturally in a bog (where the plant is found) and become part of the growing medium. It probably wouldn't make much difference either way so their removal is a personal preference, IMHO.

    Jade is really easy to root. Make a cut just below a node and put the cutting aside for a few days to allow the wound to dry completely. Then plant the cutting in a suitable medium and it'll take root. I once left a cutting to dry for almost two weeks and it start to root on its own. Tough as nails.
     
  3. Initial M

    Initial M Member

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    Thanks, but what do you mean by node.
     
  4. Junglekeeper

    Junglekeeper Esteemed Contributor 10 Years

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    A node is the the joint between sections in the stem. You may be able to just plant what you have depending on where your friend made the original cut. A single leaf will also root if you place it on top of the soil. Did I mention these things are easy to root?
     
  5. Norm_Jr

    Norm_Jr Member

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    Hello!

    Thank you for all of the information!

    What is "suitable Medium" for jade plants?

    Norm_Jr
     
  6. kome

    kome Active Member

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    for example:potting soil
     
  7. Rima

    Rima Active Member

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    Potting soil has too much peat in it and stays too wet all the time (won't drain well) for jades. You need to at least make the mix 10-20% p.s. and a lot more large particle sandy, gritty stuff, using lots of perlite, small aquarium gravel, chicken grit (from a feed store) is excellent, crushed lava rock if you have it out there, anything that lets water run almost right through the mix. And don't let the pot sit in a saucer full of drain water or roots will rot.
     

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