Plants Seeds and Cuttings
Home CHECKOUT Pest IssuesSucculent CareContact us Useful LinksGrowing Guides
 
 
Adenium Plants  
Adenium Seeds  
Agave  
Cactus Cuttings  
Cactus Plants  
Cactus Seeds  
Cool Plants  
Date Seeds  
Dragon Fruit Cuttings  
Dragon Fruit Plants  
Dragon Fruit Seeds  
Euphorbia Cuttings  
Euphorbia Milii  
Euphorbia Plants  
Hoya Cuttings  
Hoya Plants  
Opuntia  
Plant Pots  
Rebutia  
Seeds Adenia  
Seeds Adenium  
Seeds Cactus  
Seeds Oleander  
Seeds Palm Tree  
Seeds Plumeria  
Seeds Tree and Shrubs  
Succulent Seeds  
Seeds Water Lily  
Stapelia Cuttings  
Stapelia Plants  
Succulent Cuttings  
Succulent Plants  
Vegetables

CHECKOUT

View Shopping Cart
Euro 0.00

 Care - Information
 List of our plants
 Our product catagories
 Adenium Plant Care
 Adenium Seeds Germination
 Bourgainvillea
 Cactus Care
 Cactus Cuttings
 Carob Seeds
 Common Pests
 Dragon Fruit
 Dwarf Umbrella
 Echinopsis pachanoi
 Elephant Bush
 Epiphyllum Care
 Fig Tree Cuttings
 Hoya's
 Italian Cypress
 Kalanchoe
 Lantana Seeds
 Lithop care
 Milii Cuttings
 Mock Orange
 Oleander Cuttings
 Oleander Seed Germination
 Plumeria
 Prickly Pear Pads
 Prickly Pear Seeds
 Sanseveria cuttings
 Sedum Leaves
 Stapelia
 String of hearts
 String of Pearls
 Succulent Care
 Succulent leaf cuttings

String of hearts

Propagating string of hearts | Water method see photos below

My favorite propagation method is water propagation.

It’s easy, almost always works and allows you to see how far along the rooting process is.

If you want to propagate your string of hearts using the water method, all you need is a little vase, clean scissors and some water.

Simply snip off the vine pieces you want to root trim off the two leaves from the top of the cutting close to the stem, trim the stem to 5mm from the node where you cut the leaves off and place them in the vase.

That is it. All you need after this is some patience and a nice light, warm location to place the vase.

If all is well, roots should appear after anywhere between a several days and a three to four weeks.

How long it takes depends on factors like light and temperature.

After the vines have rooted you can pot up your plant or just leave them in the vase indefinitely.

Propagating string of hearts | Soil method

Prefer your plants in pots rather than vases?

The soil method is another super easy way to propagate your string of hearts that comes in especially handy when your plant has gotten too long or scraggly and you want to shorten it or give it a fuller look in the same pot.

How do you do it?

Well, as with the water method this is quite easy.

Just snip off the vines the way you prefer. Remove some leaves on the side you want to plant and stick the vines into the soil.

Make sure at least a few nodes (tiny bumps on the vine that leaves or roots can grow from) are covered in soil or at least touching it.

Then, spray the parts that touch the soil once a day or so to encourage rooting.

Once roots have appeared you’re good and new growth should start to pop up soon as well.

[FOOTER_TEXT]