You've taught me how to water, how to prune, how to root prune, and so much more - you are basically like a father to me now, so I'll be expecting birthday gifts from now on 😁
"Be bold, bite the bullet, and make the cut." Peter Chan owner/founder of Herons Bonsai, London's premiere bonsai nursery. It most certainly is a "leap of faith" when making drastically hard pruned cuts, especially when it's taken so long to grow and, in the case of bonsai, can cost hundreds of dollars. When done INTELLIGENTLY your plant will rejuvenate and become the thriving and enjoyable plant you've desired! It's also good to apply a sealant to the wounds to reduce the loss of sap. Great video my friend, keep it up!
Thanks for the advice, yes years ago I too was always afraid to cut my plants, but when they then multiply with cloning the happiness increases and the house looks like a jungle! Hugs to all
I’ve been binge-watching your videos and I have to say you are probably my favourite “plant RUclipsr” so far. There are great channels with great content but, as a “first time plant parent” sometimes the “perfection” they portray makes me feel overwhelmed and discouraged. The “chill” vibe I get with your content makes me quite excited and eager to learn 📖🤓 Looking forward to more content 😊
@@SheffieldMadePlants I second his comment! Please keep up the good work ... and could you reply to even the oldie but goodie vids you made too though? Some of us have just discovered them, and you.
WhenI was very little, my mom had several rose bushes in our yard. Every year , after flowering, she would cut them WAY back. They would come back beautifully every time!
I once cut off the top of my rubber tree too, though far less drastically than you did. I wanted it to make side branches instead of growing up with its one stem only. And side branches it did make! Four of them!
before you cut the head off your tree for tilting slightly you might want to consider metal wire for binding it straight. this is done to bonsai to shape them and works just fine. if the stem is too tough you can just bind one end of the plant to the pot and pull it straight. i use this method to get a funny S-shape on my shefflera stem for aestetics.
Ha ah! I love The one direction quick view, you’re great. I’ve listened to your plants tips (cutting the roots) and my formerly root bound plants are thriving! So great! Thank you
I did this to a fiddle leaf fig that had reached our ceiling a year or two ago. It only had one LONG stem. I hacked it below the halfway point, then I created cuttings from the top portion. The base has branched and now has a lot of leaves. All the cuttings have formed individual plants. So, now I have a branched main plant, instead of one long stem, and a bunch of baby plants.
@@markb8954 I didn't do anything but cut it and drop the bottom ends into water. I didn't do anything else. The plant took care of the rest. Once each piece had roots and started sprouting leaves, I put them into pots.
I have a huge fiddle leaf fig I want to do this to! It's my favorite, but it's becoming so top heavy and leaning too much in one direction. I'm scared to do it but glad you had success. How long did it take for it to start growing? At what time of year did you prune it?
@@yassebasse86 Scared the heck out of me, too. I initially tried "layering" but that failed completely, so that's when I decided to go extreme. Scared me badly, since it's one of my favorite plants, but I finally took a deep breath and just hacked it off. It actually took a few WEEKS before I finally started seeing the first hints of new growth. Once it started, though, it really took off.
This video came at a perfect time for me. I was about to prune my jade back without giving it a through dry-out time before cutting and then watering afterwards. I really needed this one! Thanks, sir for your generosity in sharing your tips in this video.
I did this to two of my older crotons that were getting a little scarce in foliage on top and they pushed out a bunch of new shoots from the bottom of the stem. It's definitely scary but a great tool to know if you refuse to ever give up on a plant like me!
You sir, are doing gods work. So glad i found your channel! Ive been loving your content and learning a lot! Thank you and keep up the amazing content 🙏
I'm thinking of doing this to my regular Ficus Elastica. It has two really nice and healthy side stems, but they're pretty much growing in the same direction. It makes the plant look wonky, and has it leaning quite a lot to that side as well. As a bonus for 'beheading' my rubber plant, I can gift my sister or niece with one of the cuttings, perhaps even both of them 😄 Thank you for the video Have a nice weekend everyone
I had to hard prune my lemon lime philodendron because it was actively dying and I couldn't figure out why. I just love this plant so much, I was pretty disappointed. I ended up cutting off the good parts and planted them. So far it appears the cuttings I saved are doing well and one is showing new growth!
A year ago, I notched and pruned my ficus elastica tree, I have 3 types and all of them produced multiple branches in no time....! Best decision I made 😁
did this to a cherry laurel last year cut in half and put the top half in another pot and 1 year later the top of the old plant is now regrowing and the old bottom half is bushing out new leaves and slowly starting to regrow to the top where I cut it. Amazing to see it coming back to life
90% of my plants are throne-less so I do the soft pruning using my fingers to pluck or pull back the leaves to break off naturally. I only use the cutting pliers on my periwinkle flowers t use them at my alters. I had noticed they do grow more and are fluffier than those plants I never cut so dramatically. Thank you for your channel on to care for our green babies.
You can use keiki paste on the nodes where leaves have fallen off on ficus plants. They grow branches where you apply this paste. Brilliant way of shaping plants without sacrificing healthy parts.
@Sheffield Made Plants 🤣 It happens. It hurts your heart for a minute or two but then you realize in a couple of months, you get to see some new growth!
I learned that when I cut a 50 inch piracanta at the base because I didn't want it to grow there. Then I went to Mexico around c19 time and ended up staying there 2 years, when I got back the piracanta had grown back and was 6ft tall with a 2.5 inch trunk!
A lot of plants can be propagated from cuttings. I did it with a Dracaena marginata “tricolor” several years ago after it had grown to over 3 feet tall. Now I have 2 of them together in the pot. Succulents with stems can be propagated this way too. (You can also propagate some succulents from leaves, but they take years to mature.)
I did the same to mine. But whenever I saw a new branch coming out is not the way I like, I wait until it's 10" long and has 3-4 leaves, then I cut it plant it another pot.. I succeeded twice but failed last year as the branch was wilted. Then when my original plants need repotting I also plant the propagated branch( having healthy roots) along side it..
I think I need to do this to my fiddle leaf… it’s got two gangly looking stems with about 7 leaves each. And they’re dropping by the week even though I haven’t changed anything about how I care for it. I think it’s time today.
My rubber plant bled so much after I pruned it last year I started to cry I felt guilty, almost like I had hurt it, recently I found a piece of tree trunk in the park and I placed it at the root of the rubber after a while the leaves started turning yellow and falling off, I may have gotten it sick by doing that, so I'm gonna prune it again, following your instructions and hopefully all will be well, I don't wanna loose my plant.....🌷
So this was encouraging, We have at least a 50 yr old rubber tree between us and neighbor, He wants to cut down the tree. At least we can save our half.❤
I've pruned my pothos at the base whenever their longer stems no longer have any leaves to encourage new growth. I can also save the nodes from those same stems to develop new baby pothos; however, I haven't done that method in awhile because I have too many of these plants now. 🤣
i use to work on a garden in trinidad it was on the mountain. walking in the dirt road i spot a plant, it was about a 1ft tall , it had white on the leave it had a pod , the stem was so solid it felt like wire or steel , i think it it felt like a 1/4 inch steel. i never saw it before, or saw anyone with it , i did see 1 more on a next hill side
I love your videos. Oh! I wanted to let you know that you informed and encouraged me when I didn’t know what my plant was (the Birken). It’s doing great and putting out another leaf. I’ve had 3 since I’ve owned it. (Since autumn or early winter.) anyway, I just chopped the top off my dragon tree (very young,only about 8 inches tall when I cut it). I’m gambling on it splitting into two tops. I hope I didn’t mess up.
I just started working as a gardener at a big garden store that also does winter storage for potted tropical and sub-tropical plants. Mostly these come from bars and restaurants that use them simply as decoration for their outdoor seating, and nobody working at those places is employed as a gardener, so watering is all they ever get from their owners. There's a couple of customers where I'll be calling the owners to ask we can do some serious downsizing on their plants. I've been doing a few deliveries with our delivery drivers, and getting a highly fragile plant through squeezes between houses and garages that are only a third as wide as the plants is just a terrible day at work for everyone involved.
Thanks for this excellent, approachable content! I have a poinsettia (rescued from work after Christmas about five years ago) that has gotten very leggy - too tall and just a few leaves in a bunch at the top. Now having watched your videos, I'm guessing it needs both a root prune and a hard prune. Since it's May as I'm writing this, I'll start with the hard prune described in this video and maybe save the root prune until winter rolls around and the plant has had time to recover from the hard prune.
I am very inexperienced. I hard pruned a ficus bonsai (curtain) that I have had for 7 years. I thought it was a goner.... It was perpetually droopy, yellow and when I would water it, the runoff would be red/dark brown (root rot). I cleaned up the roots, cleaned the pot, gave it fresh potting mix and hard pruned it so it looks like a bare dead tree. I had read after I did this that plants need leaves and without leaves plants will die (so I thought). I initially thought I had killed it, as it stayed in that bare state for several weeks. Mind you I did this in February. Right when I nearly gave up hope I saw tiny small green buds (end of March). Those buds quickly turned into freshly green stems and leaves (April). My plant is now bushier and better than ever!
Yesterday I chopped off the top of my money tree, I accidentally overwatered it a few times and it was looking terrible so I decided to propagate the last few healthy leaves in order to save it before it’s too late, but I’m also keeping the leftover stem to see if it’ll regrow anything. Sometimes it’s fun to experiment!
I recently had to hard prune the crap out of a marble Pothos that I had in one of my arid terrariums, it clearly didn't like the dry conditions so it was all saggy. I cut the whole thing into four big cuttings, and got rid of the old roots. I put the cuttings in water and basically restarted the entire plant and so far it's been doing much better
YES! this is what i was looking for a week ago! thanks! perfect for spring! I cut head off my silvr sword philo to branch it out, i got three shoots! I'm very excited to say the least, it was stressful for about 6 weeks tho!
One of my oldest plants is a 15+ y/o rubber tree that I waited way too long to prune. It wasn't until it was hitting the ceiling that I finally did it. It's branching out finally but it still has to be supported by a PVC pole.
I just hard pruned my croton and I really felt scared of it specially since it's my favourite so it just felt wrong, this video helped me understand the process a little bit more and avoid some mistakes, thank you so much, I love your content!
You can also fine a node, slide it 1/2 into the trunk just below a node, insert a small piece of plastic, and it should activate the node. This way you have a bit more control over where the plant grows a new node.
Not sure if someone’s asked, but can you propagate the cuttings? Especially the rubber plants. Curious about that since I have a new baby rubber plant and would like to learn more. Really glad I found your channel!
I lost all my leaves on my rubber plant last year (thrips) it was just a stick. I cut or should i say slashed just above where all the leaves was and now it has branched out on each one of those cuts with several leaves on each (not one leaf like before). So if you wanted growth further down or the opposite side you could try that method to encourage growth.
Thank you for all the useful information, I learned so much from you and your videos gave me so much confidence to push my limits 🙏🏽. I just got my first Ficus Elastica Ruby, $5 from a grocery store 😁. So cheap because it was in a very bad shape. I followed your instructions and it thriving uncontrollably 😅. It has 4 stems and the leaves start to overlap. After seeing the results in this video, I might cut the 2 new stems and propagate it. It will be a new experiment for me. Fingers crossed 🤞😄. Again thank you 🙏🏽
I had the same issue you were having w8th the ficus,but with an avocado tree. But the new branch always wanted to go up instead of laterally. I found out later that it was apparently due to lack of light. So maybe that ficus also needs more light than it's getting
After you prune any rubber plant better than keeping it indoor at the brightest spot shift it outdoors in full sun I did the same after pruning my plant It had only 1 long leggy stem so I pruned it ,today just today 4 new shoots came from every side😆 after some leaves come shift it in indoors again good idea Tip From (HY Greens LTD)
A week ago I hard pruned my aglaonema. I didn't care for properly when I first got it two years ago so it grew up to be very leggy. When I cut the head off, there was still too much stem to leave behind so I chopped off the middle part as well and put it in a tube with perlite just to see what happens. There are no roots yet, but it has green buds all over it! I'm so curious if this stem piece would actually develop into a normal plant. Pretty sure this won't work on plants with wood-like stems though 😅
Thanks, that was helpful, especially with your example. I have a ficus elastica that I have had since '02, it has grown slowly and steadily with 10 stems going in all different directions. It is quite bushy, but getting wide and in the way of some other plants in my bay window. I've been considering pruning and propagating the cuttings, but wasn't sure if I could cut it back to the woody parts. Apparently I can.
Just found your brilliant vlogs ; can you please do one on indoor jasmine I had one that was in flower on a wire hoop ; what do I do now it’s stoped flowering?
Hi Mr Shiffield Jennifer from Trinidad do you have any video on the Fiddle Leaf plant and if so can you send the link for me thank you. Great video as usual I love trimming back my plants here in d tropics they do great when pruned especially my roses they love it. Hey yr words are pretty harsh lol some ppl might get scared just by yr words like "decapitate" lol so be careful they never want to prune their plants again 😂 😂. Thanks agqin God bless stay safe stay bless keep smiling
Thank you for this video.. Would you recommend doing a hard prune for pest reasons? I have a small Birkin Philodendron, and it has thrips unfortunately. I've cut off alot of leaves already but now am considering just cutting all the leaves off and leaving just the "stump" and treating the soil with pesticides.. Would this yield a good result?
Great content and delivery thanks...After a cold snap in Florida it was either perform the hard prune or throw out the ficus with massive leaves. It is showing signs of growth dont know if they will be leaves or branches. BTW.... fairy soap is truly something a Brit could say and get away with in America well it has a different connotation altogether.
My snake plant has become huge. It has gotten so big that it is very hard to manage its maintenance. I'm not sure what to do with it. It is over 9 years old and very sentimental to me. This video has a lot of good advice. I sort of smirk when he demonstrates his tips with small snake plants. I ,in no way, think I know more than a professional plant grower. I just would like to see him using a bigger snake plant example.
Thanks for all the great advice!! I’m thinking of doing this to my mature Pilea but don’t know if I can bring myself to! (The consolation being at least I can grown another Pilea from the part I cut off!)
@@SheffieldMadePlants I have cut down smaller leggy ones and they’ve come back great and bushy! My big one isn’t too leggy but the leaves have gotten misshapen and some are now convex instead of flat! 😭
I’d be very interested to know.. re the hard pruning of the rubber plant, what did you do with the huge section you cut off? My rubber plant is getting very tall and woody at the bottom like yours. I’d like to hard prune it, but I’d like to help the top part grow too.
I had a plant about 6 weeks and got a bit to high one day and cut all the leaves off at the stem I wish I’d have left it to see if it would have grown again
@@SheffieldMadePlants I tried again (many times before) but the leaves just stayed wilted. The original plant is healthy, like you said the new leaves started coming out from the cut. Do you have a specific video on growing roots? Feel like i am missing something, even bamboo doesn't grow roots for me. Thanks for all your videos! I love them. I used to kill every plant and now finally learned how since I found you
i hard prune mt bassilicum , basicly i cut it down till like 5 cm en put the 15 cm i pruned off in water to create a new bassilicum plant the 5cm stump just grows 2 new growths and the 15cm top becomes a new plant with roots in less than 7 day's
Get exclusive bonus content at www.patreon.com/sheffieldmadeplants
"aNd tHeN tHiS hApPeNeD"
youre a garbage person..
So I have to join first
You've taught me how to water, how to prune, how to root prune, and so much more - you are basically like a father to me now, so I'll be expecting birthday gifts from now on 😁
😂😂😂
This is hilarious. I'm subscribing because of this comment after only watching 2 videos lol. You need to be gifted
❤❤❤❤❤ 😮
😂😂😂❤
@SilverSurfer-mg6ti❤
Love the commitment involved in making videos like this with one year ago follow ups. It’s great to see the true impact of what you tried
Thank you 😊
Tip: Always research your plant before cutting it, some like basil need to be cut only above a node of leaves or else they won't grow back
"Be bold, bite the bullet, and make the cut." Peter Chan owner/founder of Herons Bonsai, London's premiere bonsai nursery.
It most certainly is a "leap of faith" when making drastically hard pruned cuts, especially when it's taken so long to grow and, in the case of bonsai, can cost hundreds of dollars. When done INTELLIGENTLY your plant will rejuvenate and become the thriving and enjoyable plant you've desired! It's also good to apply a sealant to the wounds to reduce the loss of sap. Great video my friend, keep it up!
Well put thanks 👍
What's best to seal with though?
I cut my plant as stated in the video and it died! Now, I don't have to waste my time with it anymore. Thank you for the tips!
I did this with my monstera, 3 of my pothos, and my syngonium albo, all heavily wilted and are struggling hard from it.
@ 3:20 explains
Thanks for the advice, yes years ago I too was always afraid to cut my plants, but when they then multiply with cloning the happiness increases and the house looks like a jungle! Hugs to all
I’ve been binge-watching your videos and I have to say you are probably my favourite “plant RUclipsr” so far.
There are great channels with great content but, as a “first time plant parent” sometimes the “perfection” they portray makes me feel overwhelmed and discouraged.
The “chill” vibe I get with your content makes me quite excited and eager to learn 📖🤓
Looking forward to more content 😊
Awesome thank you very much 😊
@@SheffieldMadePlants I second his comment! Please keep up the good work ... and could you reply to even the oldie but goodie vids you made too though? Some of us have just discovered them, and you.
WhenI was very little, my mom had several rose bushes in our yard. Every year , after flowering, she would cut them WAY back. They would come back beautifully every time!
It's great for rose bushes!
I did the same to my rubber plant. Took a while but it exploded in all directions and looks so much better now.
Great stuff 👍
I once cut off the top of my rubber tree too, though far less drastically than you did. I wanted it to make side branches instead of growing up with its one stem only. And side branches it did make! Four of them!
Nice! 4 stems is great
Why is it I always get 1 stem every time I give a cut?
@@rachnarane5227 that can be because it didn't get enough light after pruning
before you cut the head off your tree for tilting slightly you might want to consider metal wire for binding it straight. this is done to bonsai to shape them and works just fine. if the stem is too tough you can just bind one end of the plant to the pot and pull it straight. i use this method to get a funny S-shape on my shefflera stem for aestetics.
Thanks for the tip
Around a month ago I hard pruned my dracaena marginata, and now it's pushing branches from four additional spots. Highly recommended 👍🏾
Nice 👌
I don't think I'll be stressed if my head was cut off. On the contrary, I'll be stress-free 😂 Joke aside, great video!
🤣
😂😂😂😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Oh my 😂😂😂 I needed that laugh! Thank u! It hit me dead right in the funny bone. Lol
U might grow at least 2 heads
I root pruned my massive spider plant last week after watching your video about it and it has perked up fantastically.
Great stuff 😁
Ha ah! I love
The one direction quick view, you’re great.
I’ve listened to your plants tips (cutting the roots) and my formerly root bound plants are thriving! So great! Thank you
Glad you enjoyed it! 😁
I did this to a fiddle leaf fig that had reached our ceiling a year or two ago. It only had one LONG stem. I hacked it below the halfway point, then I created cuttings from the top portion. The base has branched and now has a lot of leaves. All the cuttings have formed individual plants. So, now I have a branched main plant, instead of one long stem, and a bunch of baby plants.
A great success 👍
I did this too. What did you do to the cutting in order to get it to root? Right now I have my piece in water.
@@markb8954 I didn't do anything but cut it and drop the bottom ends into water. I didn't do anything else. The plant took care of the rest. Once each piece had roots and started sprouting leaves, I put them into pots.
I have a huge fiddle leaf fig I want to do this to! It's my favorite, but it's becoming so top heavy and leaning too much in one direction. I'm scared to do it but glad you had success. How long did it take for it to start growing? At what time of year did you prune it?
@@yassebasse86 Scared the heck out of me, too. I initially tried "layering" but that failed completely, so that's when I decided to go extreme. Scared me badly, since it's one of my favorite plants, but I finally took a deep breath and just hacked it off. It actually took a few WEEKS before I finally started seeing the first hints of new growth. Once it started, though, it really took off.
This video came at a perfect time for me. I was about to prune my jade back without giving it a through dry-out time before cutting and then watering afterwards. I really needed this one! Thanks, sir for your generosity in sharing your tips in this video.
My pleasure 😊
I did this to two of my older crotons that were getting a little scarce in foliage on top and they pushed out a bunch of new shoots from the bottom of the stem. It's definitely scary but a great tool to know if you refuse to ever give up on a plant like me!
Great! 😁
Very nice! In Bonsai we call this type of work a "trunk chop" It creates taper and movement in the tree making it look older but in miniature!
I appreciate that you show how your plant look a year on after any alterations. it gives me hope i just might not kill if I prune my plants.
Cool glad you enjoyed it
I did this to my focus ruby several months ago. It's coming back beautifully.
Nice!
You sir, are doing gods work. So glad i found your channel! Ive been loving your content and learning a lot! Thank you and keep up the amazing content 🙏
Awesome thank you 😊
I like your bold approach, and they way you've explained these process well.
I appreciate that!
I'm thinking of doing this to my regular Ficus Elastica. It has two really nice and healthy side stems, but they're pretty much growing in the same direction.
It makes the plant look wonky, and has it leaning quite a lot to that side as well.
As a bonus for 'beheading' my rubber plant, I can gift my sister or niece with one of the cuttings, perhaps even both of them 😄
Thank you for the video
Have a nice weekend everyone
We’ll worth doing! Have a good weekend yourself 👍
A man who knows his onions ,big time.
Thanks 😊
I had to hard prune my lemon lime philodendron because it was actively dying and I couldn't figure out why. I just love this plant so much, I was pretty disappointed. I ended up cutting off the good parts and planted them. So far it appears the cuttings I saved are doing well and one is showing new growth!
Nice save! My L&L doesn't do much 🤷🏻♂️
Yeah Im happy it's a very beautiful plant. It seems mine has responded well to a plant light 😊
A year ago, I notched and pruned my ficus elastica tree, I have 3 types and all of them produced multiple branches in no time....! Best decision I made 😁
Great stuff 👍
Thank you for all of your content now i have fabulous plants
I love cutting back my crotons, coleus and my favorite Hawaiian T a propagating the cuttings. Yes the plants looks soooo much better too.
So true!
I think the video we all want to see is how the cuttings you placed in water to propagate new plants turned out.
did this to a cherry laurel last year cut in half and put the top half in another pot and 1 year later the top of the old plant is now regrowing and the old bottom half is bushing out new leaves and slowly starting to regrow to the top where I cut it. Amazing to see it coming back to life
Good work
90% of my plants are throne-less so I do the soft pruning using my fingers to pluck or pull back the leaves to break off naturally. I only use the cutting pliers on my periwinkle flowers t use them at my alters. I had noticed they do grow more and are fluffier than those plants I never cut so dramatically. Thank you for your channel on to care for our green babies.
Thanks for tuning in!
You can use keiki paste on the nodes where leaves have fallen off on ficus plants. They grow branches where you apply this paste. Brilliant way of shaping plants without sacrificing healthy parts.
I can't seem to get it easily in UK
So true. I have had to do that several times. Either by an accident or because the plant just needed a fresh start. 💜👍🏾
My first time was an accident 😂
@Sheffield Made Plants 🤣 It happens. It hurts your heart for a minute or two but then you realize in a couple of months, you get to see some new growth!
I learned that when I cut a 50 inch piracanta at the base because I didn't want it to grow there. Then I went to Mexico around c19 time and ended up staying there 2 years, when I got back the piracanta had grown back and was 6ft tall with a 2.5 inch trunk!
A lot of plants can be propagated from cuttings. I did it with a Dracaena marginata “tricolor” several years ago after it had grown to over 3 feet tall. Now I have 2 of them together in the pot. Succulents with stems can be propagated this way too. (You can also propagate some succulents from leaves, but they take years to mature.)
As always, great advice. Plants are a lot more resilient than many thank. Thanks for the video, 👍
Thanks for watching 😁
I did the same to mine. But whenever I saw a new branch coming out is not the way I like, I wait until it's 10" long and has 3-4 leaves, then I cut it plant it another pot.. I succeeded twice but failed last year as the branch was wilted. Then when my original plants need repotting I also plant the propagated branch( having healthy roots) along side it..
I should have done that to my rubber tree
I just cut one of my 7feet philodendrons in half haha. I’m so excited to see how the bottom half reacts.
You’ve got this ✊
Love this video, makes me feel optimistic about some of the plant rescues I have that need some harder pruning. Thanks 👏
My pleasure 😊
I would recommend to use keiki paste on any node you want new branch to come. It really works😊
Thanks for the tip. Is it just for orchids?
@@SheffieldMadePlants No it works on any plant
I think I need to do this to my fiddle leaf… it’s got two gangly looking stems with about 7 leaves each. And they’re dropping by the week even though I haven’t changed anything about how I care for it. I think it’s time today.
You’ve got this ✊
2:01 LOL "one direction" 😂
My rubber plant bled so much after I pruned it last year I started to cry I felt guilty, almost like I had hurt it, recently I found a piece of tree trunk in the park and I placed it at the root of the rubber after a while the leaves started turning yellow and falling off, I may have gotten it sick by doing that, so I'm gonna prune it again, following your instructions and hopefully all will be well, I don't wanna loose my plant.....🌷
Hope it works out well 🤞
My young apple had rust or some disease so I lopped it in half so there’s just a stick and now it’s sprouting all over and much better shape !
Works a charm!
Thanks Mr Sheffield for those important information.
Thanks for watching 😁
So this was encouraging, We have at least a 50 yr old rubber tree between us and neighbor, He wants to cut down the tree. At least we can save our half.❤
Another very thorough, excellent video! Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
I've pruned my pothos at the base whenever their longer stems no longer have any leaves to encourage new growth. I can also save the nodes from those same stems to develop new baby pothos; however, I haven't done that method in awhile because I have too many of these plants now. 🤣
i use to work on a garden in trinidad it was on the mountain. walking in the dirt road i spot a plant, it was about a 1ft tall , it had white on the leave it had a pod , the stem was so solid it felt like wire or steel , i think it it felt like a 1/4 inch steel. i never saw it before, or saw anyone with it , i did see 1 more on a next hill side
I love your videos. Oh! I wanted to let you know that you informed and encouraged me when I didn’t know what my plant was (the Birken). It’s doing great and putting out another leaf. I’ve had 3 since I’ve owned it. (Since autumn or early winter.) anyway, I just chopped the top off my dragon tree (very young,only about 8 inches tall when I cut it). I’m gambling on it splitting into two tops. I hope I didn’t mess up.
It should work out alright 😁. Glad your Birkin is growing!
I just started working as a gardener at a big garden store that also does winter storage for potted tropical and sub-tropical plants. Mostly these come from bars and restaurants that use them simply as decoration for their outdoor seating, and nobody working at those places is employed as a gardener, so watering is all they ever get from their owners.
There's a couple of customers where I'll be calling the owners to ask we can do some serious downsizing on their plants. I've been doing a few deliveries with our delivery drivers, and getting a highly fragile plant through squeezes between houses and garages that are only a third as wide as the plants is just a terrible day at work for everyone involved.
I didn't know bars and restaurants did this but makes sense
Thanks for this excellent, approachable content! I have a poinsettia (rescued from work after Christmas about five years ago) that has gotten very leggy - too tall and just a few leaves in a bunch at the top. Now having watched your videos, I'm guessing it needs both a root prune and a hard prune. Since it's May as I'm writing this, I'll start with the hard prune described in this video and maybe save the root prune until winter rolls around and the plant has had time to recover from the hard prune.
You’re probably better off doing both now to be honest
I am very inexperienced. I hard pruned a ficus bonsai (curtain) that I have had for 7 years. I thought it was a goner.... It was perpetually droopy, yellow and when I would water it, the runoff would be red/dark brown (root rot). I cleaned up the roots, cleaned the pot, gave it fresh potting mix and hard pruned it so it looks like a bare dead tree.
I had read after I did this that plants need leaves and without leaves plants will die (so I thought). I initially thought I had killed it, as it stayed in that bare state for several weeks. Mind you I did this in February. Right when I nearly gave up hope I saw tiny small green buds (end of March). Those buds quickly turned into freshly green stems and leaves (April). My plant is now bushier and better than ever!
It’s great when you start to see life on the plant again!
Yesterday I chopped off the top of my money tree, I accidentally overwatered it a few times and it was looking terrible so I decided to propagate the last few healthy leaves in order to save it before it’s too late, but I’m also keeping the leftover stem to see if it’ll regrow anything. Sometimes it’s fun to experiment!
💯
I recently had to hard prune the crap out of a marble Pothos that I had in one of my arid terrariums, it clearly didn't like the dry conditions so it was all saggy. I cut the whole thing into four big cuttings, and got rid of the old roots. I put the cuttings in water and basically restarted the entire plant and so far it's been doing much better
At least you've got extra plants now!
@@SheffieldMadePlants yes!
YES! this is what i was looking for a week ago! thanks! perfect for spring! I cut head off my silvr sword philo to branch it out, i got three shoots! I'm very excited to say the least, it was stressful for about 6 weeks tho!
Bravery is rewarded 😁
One of my oldest plants is a 15+ y/o rubber tree that I waited way too long to prune. It wasn't until it was hitting the ceiling that I finally did it. It's branching out finally but it still has to be supported by a PVC pole.
You could go even lower with the prune?
I just hard pruned my croton and I really felt scared of it specially since it's my favourite so it just felt wrong, this video helped me understand the process a little bit more and avoid some mistakes, thank you so much, I love your content!
Glad you found it useful 👍
You can also fine a node, slide it 1/2 into the trunk just below a node, insert a small piece of plastic, and it should activate the node. This way you have a bit more control over where the plant grows a new node.
You sound like a surgeon 😁
Got to say, that's very confusing English..."insert a small piece what's plastic"...????
@@kateoc8 autocorrect… thanks for the grammar lesson.
Thank you for the video you guy's are helping us
Not sure if someone’s asked, but can you propagate the cuttings? Especially the rubber plants. Curious about that since I have a new baby rubber plant and would like to learn more. Really glad I found your channel!
Yes you can. I showed that in the original video ruclips.net/video/AKUgS9JxtKI/видео.html
@@SheffieldMadePlants awesome, thanks for the link!! 😊
I did that last year, it took forever to grow roots 😅 but it's now a happy little baby tree
I lost all my leaves on my rubber plant last year (thrips) it was just a stick. I cut or should i say slashed just above where all the leaves was and now it has branched out on each one of those cuts with several leaves on each (not one leaf like before). So if you wanted growth further down or the opposite side you could try that method to encourage growth.
So you didn’t cut all the way through? I’m trying that now and waiting for something to happen
@SheffieldMadePlants no just a little cut right above where the old leaf use to be. It worked very well for me.
Thank you for all the useful information, I learned so much from you and your videos gave me so much confidence to push my limits 🙏🏽. I just got my first Ficus Elastica Ruby, $5 from a grocery store 😁. So cheap because it was in a very bad shape. I followed your instructions and it thriving uncontrollably 😅. It has 4 stems and the leaves start to overlap. After seeing the results in this video, I might cut the 2 new stems and propagate it. It will be a new experiment for me. Fingers crossed 🤞😄. Again thank you 🙏🏽
Glad it was helpful 👍
I had the same issue you were having w8th the ficus,but with an avocado tree. But the new branch always wanted to go up instead of laterally. I found out later that it was apparently due to lack of light. So maybe that ficus also needs more light than it's getting
I cut my lanky curry leaf , at the top, chop chop. I got a bushy little plant now.
Great stuff 👍
" One Direction "
And the real OD pic pops out 😆
😁
Love your videos, they make me chuckle!! 😄
Thank you 😊
Thank for this great class about pruning
Thanks for watching 😁
After you prune any rubber plant better than keeping it indoor at the brightest spot shift it outdoors in full sun I did the same after pruning my plant It had only 1 long leggy stem so I pruned it ,today just today 4 new shoots came from every side😆 after some leaves come shift it in indoors again good idea Tip From (HY Greens LTD)
That’ll work 😁👍
Thank you my dear ♥️
You bet!
what about repotting it on angle .. and might do some good.. take off lower leaves grow tasler and topos to make go outwards.
Worth a try
A week ago I hard pruned my aglaonema. I didn't care for properly when I first got it two years ago so it grew up to be very leggy. When I cut the head off, there was still too much stem to leave behind so I chopped off the middle part as well and put it in a tube with perlite just to see what happens. There are no roots yet, but it has green buds all over it! I'm so curious if this stem piece would actually develop into a normal plant. Pretty sure this won't work on plants with wood-like stems though 😅
I reckon that will turn into a plant. I did the same with a monstera node. No leaves on it, just a stump. It’s grown nicely into a plant
That's exciting, I didn't know you could do that! Thanks for sharing!
I was waiting for you to drop a joke about the Queen of Hearts 😂. Oh well, next time!
😅
Thanks, that was helpful, especially with your example. I have a ficus elastica that I have had since '02, it has grown slowly and steadily with 10 stems going in all different directions. It is quite bushy, but getting wide and in the way of some other plants in my bay window. I've been considering pruning and propagating the cuttings, but wasn't sure if I could cut it back to the woody parts. Apparently I can.
Thanks for watching 😁
You should show how to air layer before doing a big lop off like this. What did you do with the top part?
Just found your brilliant vlogs ; can you please do one on indoor jasmine I had one that was in flower on a wire hoop ; what do I do now it’s stoped flowering?
Thanks. I'd need to get a Jasmine first 😅
🤣 his house looks already as a jungle! That's evidence that it works! 🌱🌿😁
Thank you 😊
Once all my 7 tomat plants got a disease and after a hard prune one of them bounced back and with three main stems!!!
Hi Mr Shiffield Jennifer from Trinidad do you have any video on the Fiddle Leaf plant and if so can you send the link for me thank you. Great video as usual I love trimming back my plants here in d tropics they do great when pruned especially my roses they love it. Hey yr words are pretty harsh lol some ppl might get scared just by yr words like "decapitate" lol so be careful they never want to prune their plants again 😂 😂. Thanks agqin God bless stay safe stay bless keep smiling
Gotta be dramatic sometimes 😂. Here’s the link
Stop Leaf Drop on Your Fiddle Leaf Fig
ruclips.net/video/EC6GDxbOGgE/видео.html
Some people need to grow a set...wait until they start learning about fertilisation...😊🙄
Thank you stay safe keep smiling it makes yr plants happy to
What did you do with the top you cut off? How did you propagate it? Also could you have cut it closer to the dirt So that you would have less stem?
Yes I propagated the stem pieces. You can cut a bit lower. I've not tried it right above the soil line though
Thank you for this video.. Would you recommend doing a hard prune for pest reasons? I have a small Birkin Philodendron, and it has thrips unfortunately. I've cut off alot of leaves already but now am considering just cutting all the leaves off and leaving just the "stump" and treating the soil with pesticides.. Would this yield a good result?
It’s very dramatic. This would be a last resort I think
Great content and delivery thanks...After a cold snap in Florida it was either perform the hard prune or throw out the ficus with massive leaves. It is showing signs of growth dont know if they will be leaves or branches. BTW.... fairy soap is truly something a Brit could say and get away with in America well it has a different connotation altogether.
😬
My snake plant has become huge. It has gotten so big that it is very hard to manage its maintenance. I'm not sure what to do with it. It is over 9 years old and very sentimental to me. This video has a lot of good advice. I sort of smirk when he demonstrates his tips with small snake plants. I ,in no way, think I know more than a professional plant grower. I just would like to see him using a bigger snake plant example.
Snake plant in this video? I was using a Ficus wasn’t I?
Thanks for all the great advice!! I’m thinking of doing this to my mature Pilea but don’t know if I can bring myself to! (The consolation being at least I can grown another Pilea from the part I cut off!)
They always get tall and leggy 🥲
@@SheffieldMadePlants I have cut down smaller leggy ones and they’ve come back great and bushy!
My big one isn’t too leggy but the leaves have gotten misshapen and some are now convex instead of flat! 😭
I love doing it to jade plants I stuck a leaf in soil it got roots their amazing decapitated a tall one I had the cutting grew like a weed
Very satisfying
I’d be very interested to know.. re the hard pruning of the rubber plant, what did you do with the huge section you cut off?
My rubber plant is getting very tall and woody at the bottom like yours. I’d like to hard prune it, but I’d like to help the top part grow too.
Propagated it
What a fantastic channel!
Thanks!
very clearly, thanks sir
I had a plant about 6 weeks and got a bit to high one day and cut all the leaves off at the stem I wish I’d have left it to see if it would have grown again
What do you do with the top that is cut away? Can you help them to grow roots?
Yep pop them in water to grow roots
@@SheffieldMadePlants I tried again (many times before) but the leaves just stayed wilted. The original plant is healthy, like you said the new leaves started coming out from the cut. Do you have a specific video on growing roots? Feel like i am missing something, even bamboo doesn't grow roots for me.
Thanks for all your videos! I love them. I used to kill every plant and now finally learned how since I found you
@@aerialpractice I've got a few older videos on propagation.
I was waiting for you to mention propagating the top cut after hard pruning but it never came. Please tell me you propagated that Elastica top cut!
Yea in the original video
i hard prune mt bassilicum , basicly i cut it down till like 5 cm en put the 15 cm i pruned off in water to create a new bassilicum plant the 5cm stump just grows 2 new growths
and the 15cm top becomes a new plant with roots in less than 7 day's
Perfect 👌
Can you use the top cutting of the rubber tree and if so, how? Thanks! Great videos!
Yes you can. Cut between each leaf node and pop into some water for roots to sprout in about 4 weeks
@Sheffield Made Plants - You might want to try the 'notching' method in order to encourage branching on your Ficus elastica. :)
Cheers!
I have tried but unsuccessfully ☹️
@@SheffieldMadePlants Hmm... Have you tried scraping off the bark around the notch?
@@StefanNaydenov no, didn't know you were meant to
Thank you so much this just immensely helped me
My pleasure 😊
I was recently forced to do the same thing to my lemon tree. Tonnes of new branches coming from the stump now.
Cool! I lost mine to a cold British winter
A very informative video. Thank you.
Thank you 😊
Hello, i wonder can i water the rubber plant leaves, thanks so much
Do you mean to propagate? You can prop the stems yes