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Old 20-04-2003, 06:20 PM
Cereoid-XXXX
 
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Default Dracaena. (Corn Plant) leafing

Would prefer you call your Dracaena fragrans "Dragon Tree" rather than "Corn
Plant". They are not related to Zea mays nor do they resemble the grass nor
do they grow like it.

If you grow your plant in a humid greenhouse, you might be able to keep the
plant more leafy but eventually the plant will lose its lower leaves no
matter what you do. Leaves are only temporary structures. Once they have
fallen, they will never come back. The plant is a woody shrub to small tree
with woody stems up to 15 m or more tall under favorable conditions. The
leafy plants you saw at the gerden center were probably recently gotten from
the wholesaler. In time they too will lose their lower leaves as the plants
produce new growth.

Don't cut into the stem. That will only encourage infection.

Wrapping the stem with wet peat may encourage the formation of aerial roots
but not leaves.




Plantkiller wrote in message
...
My indoor potted 'corn' plants are growing upward, and losing their
lower leaves (this is normal). However I've seen several corn
plants in the plant center which are more like bushy plants, i.e.
the leaves cover the entire plant, bottom to top.

Am I missing a method of growing corn plants?? Mine are like trees,
long stem, with a mass of top foliage, developing new leaves on
top as the stem hardends and leaves drop off the bottom.


I've tried making small 1/4 incisions into the trunk to encourage
new growth there, with a small degree of success.

Should I be wrapping the trunk with peat moss and keeping it
wet to encourage new growth?


Any ideas ???

Thanks...