Your succulents are so beautiful! For the ones that don't grow offshoots so easily I recommend a budding fertilizer that contains Cytokinin hormone. This has been a game changer for me. In my little portulaca molokiniensis I slightly peeled off some older leaves nodes and sprayed the product on it, 1 week later I have offshoots in those nodes.
Great advice- thank you 💚. Funny, i have old cytokinin in the fridge but completely forgot about it. Have to get more and do a video. Thanks so much for reminding me about it 🙂👍
@@SucculentGrowingTips Glad I could help, I'm just starting to learn to care for succulents and have been experimenting a lot. Channels like yours are super helpful, thank you!
I like your videos. Your advice is so practical. Also, despite the fact that your nursery is a bit far from my home in Texas, your experience with climate swings from high temps, uneven periods of rain, etc. seems closer to my climate than those California wimps with their ideal temps and rain. My question is: I have "babies" poppng out on three of my echiverias that went leggy (before I discovered grow lights). They are at the top of a long stem. Do I leave them on the stem? What do I do when the grow so big that the plant won't stay upright? Signed - Texas Succulent Newby
Thank you so much- glad the videos are useful :) It really does seem like Texas and Aus share a very similar climate! 😀 Re your babies- you can leave them until they become big enough to remove and then you can 'behead' the mother to correct the growth and make her shorter. I have a very old and super cringy (but informative) video on beheading Echeverias that have grown tall. If you fancy watching the link is below 🙂 ruclips.net/video/DtmHfIe53c0/видео.htmlsi=3pGeRvwmMFKc9wc1 ruclips.net/video/luuoj2dCv8M/видео.htmlsi=KN9VXE0AkbVzHG7c
@@SucculentGrowingTips - Thanks! I had not seen the follow up vid. A couple of days after I wrote the comment, I realized that your beheading vid had the answer. Some lessons need repeating to sink in.
Thank you for your good advices! I am a little bit confused about the right growing seasons of my different succulents. I know that aeoniums growing season is Winter. So is now, in January, the time for beheading or repoting? Or do I have to wait for the spring?
It can definitely be a little confusing. When it comes to cold season succulents it’s best to go by what the plant looks like. If you see signs of growth (the rosettes are opening up, new leaves growing, offsets growing) you can do beheading and repotting. If they still look like they are dormant (tight, compact rosettes) it may be best to wait until they start growing. Much can depend on how bad your winter is. If it’s freezing cold, snowy, dark etc it may take a bit longer for even the winter growers to wake up.. Hope this helps 🙂
@SucculentGrowingTips thank you for your prompt response! What you are saying makes big sense to me. I am living in Montréal and my succulents are indoors, so they don't really feel the cold. But I feel spring is coming soon because the days are longer, and I could see little new growth in some succulents. It is encouraging. Thank you for your good advice! 👍
How you propagation the Agavoides, leaves it’s brittle to plug or behead they now send of the stem of flowers ( h but not the lipstick) Thank you Newcastle AU
I like all of your videos. Thank you 😊
So nice of you, thank you ❤️
Your succulents are so beautiful! For the ones that don't grow offshoots so easily I recommend a budding fertilizer that contains Cytokinin hormone. This has been a game changer for me. In my little portulaca molokiniensis I slightly peeled off some older leaves nodes and sprayed the product on it, 1 week later I have offshoots in those nodes.
Great advice- thank you 💚. Funny, i have old cytokinin in the fridge but completely forgot about it. Have to get more and do a video. Thanks so much for reminding me about it 🙂👍
@@SucculentGrowingTips Glad I could help, I'm just starting to learn to care for succulents and have been experimenting a lot. Channels like yours are super helpful, thank you!
So glad i came across your channel. Your videos are so helpful! 💚
Thank you so much ☺💚
Wow omg look at all those babies 😊thanks for sharing 😊
Succulent babies are best 🥰
very informative. you really answer my questions- before i ask! thanks again!
amazing video as always. very very informative. Thank you!
I like your videos. Your advice is so practical. Also, despite the fact that your nursery is a bit far from my home in Texas, your experience with climate swings from high temps, uneven periods of rain, etc. seems closer to my climate than those California wimps with their ideal temps and rain. My question is: I have "babies" poppng out on three of my echiverias that went leggy (before I discovered grow lights). They are at the top of a long stem. Do I leave them on the stem? What do I do when the grow so big that the plant won't stay upright?
Signed - Texas Succulent Newby
Thank you so much- glad the videos are useful :) It really does seem like Texas and Aus share a very similar climate! 😀
Re your babies- you can leave them until they become big enough to remove and then you can 'behead' the mother to correct the growth and make her shorter. I have a very old and super cringy (but informative) video on beheading Echeverias that have grown tall. If you fancy watching the link is below 🙂
ruclips.net/video/DtmHfIe53c0/видео.htmlsi=3pGeRvwmMFKc9wc1
ruclips.net/video/luuoj2dCv8M/видео.htmlsi=KN9VXE0AkbVzHG7c
@@SucculentGrowingTips - Thanks! I had not seen the follow up vid. A couple of days after I wrote the comment, I realized that your beheading vid had the answer. Some lessons need repeating to sink in.
Thank you for your good advices! I am a little bit confused about the right growing seasons of my different succulents. I know that aeoniums growing season is Winter. So is now, in January, the time for beheading or repoting? Or do I have to wait for the spring?
It can definitely be a little confusing. When it comes to cold season succulents it’s best to go by what the plant looks like. If you see signs of growth (the rosettes are opening up, new leaves growing, offsets growing) you can do beheading and repotting. If they still look like they are dormant (tight, compact rosettes) it may be best to wait until they start growing. Much can depend on how bad your winter is. If it’s freezing cold, snowy, dark etc it may take a bit longer for even the winter growers to wake up.. Hope this helps 🙂
@SucculentGrowingTips thank you for your prompt response! What you are saying makes big sense to me. I am living in Montréal and my succulents are indoors, so they don't really feel the cold. But I feel spring is coming soon because the days are longer, and I could see little new growth in some succulents. It is encouraging. Thank you for your good advice! 👍
How you propagation the Agavoides, leaves it’s brittle to plug or behead they now send of the stem of flowers ( h but not the lipstick) Thank you Newcastle AU
Hi, do you sell succulent seeds?