Aloe Plant Propogation
Since you choose to ignore the answer I had given previously, you can go
chase yourself, you skanky addled ponce. You are still the ass sucker for
the whole group, you nitwit.
The clowns in the group that know nothing about the actual species claim
that it can be propagated from offsets even though I have already said that
the genuine Aloe candelabrum (note correct spelling) never branches and can
only be propagated from seed. Aloe candelabrum is not the same as Aloe vera.
"chaz" wrote in message
ink.net...
"Cereus-validus" wrote in message
...
You will have a very long wait because Aloe candelabrum doesn't branch.
That makes you the sucker!!!!
"chaz" wrote in message
ink.net...
"Phisherman" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 31 Mar 2004 02:12:26 GMT, "chaz" wrote:
I have an aloe candelabra that I would like to propagate into
several
plants.
If I snip off one of the "arms" will it root? If so, what method
should
I
use?
chaz
If you use just a leaf, I doubt you will get that to root. If you
are
referring to a sucker (that you call an "arm"), that should work. A
well-established aloe in a pot will send out suckers (young shoots)
that form a cluster of plants. Cut away the suckers with a sharp
knife as close to the main stem as possible. The sucker usually
does
not have roots, but pot it up and they will grow their own roots.
Avoid fertilizing the sucker for at least a year.
Thanks! I will watch for the suckers.....
And your posts show you utter lack of ettiquette on usenet posting
Is that all you can do, criticize? How about a good answer ass face.
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