Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Learn four easy methods to multiply your spider plants: water, soil, stolons, and division. Follow the step-by-step instructions and tips for each method and enjoy your new plants.
Learn how to propagate spider plants (Chlorophytum comosum) in water, soil, or by layering. Find out when to cut the babies, how to root them, and how to care for your new plants.
There are three main ways to propagate spider plant babies: by cutting them off and planting them alone in soil; by planting them in soil while they are still attached to the mother plant, severing them off of the mother plant later; and by rooting them in water.
Learn how to propagate spider plants five ways, including propagating in soil, water, and a paper towel, as well how to propagate spider plants using the stolon.
Learn how to propagate spider plants in water and transfer them to soil for better growth. Find out why water alone is not enough and how to avoid root rot and salt build up.
Spider plant propagation is super easy. Here are 5 easy ways, so choose one that works best for you! 1. Detach Spider Plant Babies & Root in Water. Spider plants produce numerous stolons or runners (they are the yellowish, long stems growing out of the parent plant) that will form perfect new babies right along them.
Propagating spider plants in water is almost as easy as breathing. Since spider plants hail from a very wet climate, they love water; they can even grow in water alone in their natural habitats (not in our tap or drinking water, though), which makes them perfect candidates for water propagation!
To propagate a spider plant in water, start by filling a container with water. Take a spider plant baby and place it in the container, ensuring that the roots are submerged in the water. Keep the container in a spot with bright, indirect light and monitor the root growth.
Learn how to easily grow new spider plants from their spiderettes or baby plants in water. Follow the step-by-step guide with tips on selecting, cutting, and caring for the spiderettes.
Learn how to propagate spiderettes, the dangling plantlets from spider plants, by growing them in soil or water. Find out when to snip the runners, how to water the new plants, and how to care for them.