• 8 Posts
  • 14 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 16th, 2023

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  • There’s a chance that you tricked it into thinking it’s spring, for lack of better terms.

    It’s something I recently learned about in reference to Jade plants that come inside for winter. If you allow them to get a certain small bit of cold before pulling inside, the temperature shifts will force blooms to occur.

    I don’t know much more about it, and I’m sure I’m botching the proper concepts here, but it sounds like what you’re experiencing.

    I have a couple larger jade (crassula ovata) plants that live outside in the summer and inside in the winter. This year they both started flowering right as I brought them inside. When I read a bit more about it, it seems like a normal technique/trick that folks use to push out flowers.

    I’ve never seen them flower before now! Not sure what else may have the same tendencies.






  • Thanks for the kind words!

    I mostly got lucky with the root placement in relation to it’s position on the rock, for what that’s worth. There are two pieces of wire that I used to strap the roots to the rock prior to it being planted. Those seemed to secure 3 (of the maybe 5) roots relatively solidly around the rock. After trimming off a few long roots, I tucked the rest down around and underneath the rock. Filling in the rest of the soil was straightforward.

    Prior to this planting I had it growing out in a kind of semi-cascade style. It was initially a small cutting propagated in water, transferred to a 4" nursery pot for about 8 months to establish initial structure, then transferred into a 2x deep 4" pot for the semi-cascade, and now the root over rock. Not a ton of root training on it besides making an initial root flare with the early repots. I definitely lucked out with how it joined up with that rock (that I found in the yard).

    Ask away if you have any questions! I could probably dig some pictures up, too if you really care.







  • Thank you!

    I’m trying to encourage some trunk thickening while slowly choosing the main branches and overall shape. I try to let this tree grow out thick and dense with very little trimming, then chop it back to a state that will let light through to the lower foliage. That, or chop it when I need room on the rack or more cuttings in the propagation station. Rinse and repeat that a couple times a year and we’re here.

    That mostly means clipping off upward growing new shoots to push that growth into lateral or more downward growing shoots.

    Holler if you have any other questions or comments! I love trees!




  • This is my first time. I’ll let you know what happens. My practices were pretty simple all in all - try to get some material that’s in the transition to woody from fresh green growth when taking cuttings. Pop those into water immediately. Trim stems down to size and reduce the foliage, to fit in your prop greenhouse. Then dip in rooting hormone powder, shake/knock off excess, and plant.

    No idea if anything will take, hahaha. Here’s to hoping! I’ll post updates if anything cool happens.