11/30/2023 0 Comments Propagation of goldilocks plant![]() ![]() This plant seems to really like this water vase. After some time, the largest clipping started making a new leaf! After many months it even started growing thick white roots. I moved these vases to a very high shelf in the children’s department, in a west window where it is bright in the afternoon but no direct sunlight comes in. This plant wasn’t even in a window and didn’t like the bright afternoon light. This was the first time I learned that a plant doesn’t like sunshine and that leaves can get burnt by the sun. After a short time there, yellow spots formed. I really didn’t think you could make a new plant from just a stalk hacked off with scissors borrowed from the customer service desk.Īt first the vases lived on top of the DVD collection. A large vase, a medium vase, and just right small vase. At first I just clipped the plant and put the stalks in 3 vases with water like Goldilocks. ![]() I clipped this plant from the Steele Memorial Library’s gigantic plant near the Large Type section. The first indirect light loving plant to come to the library was the Aglaonema, aka Chinese evergreen. This post will focus on the plants that don’t need much light and live on high shelves of books and DVDS. This was me experimenting with this new word I learned during lockdown: “PROPAGATION”. If we want a plant as big as theirs we would have to start from somewhere. I thought If Steele Memorial can have GIGANTIC plants, Horseheads Library should too. These plants were the first plants that came to live here. This post will be about the West window and Cozy Corner plants. We have previously met the plants in the East and South window. ![]()
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