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Plants that grow new plants!

PLANTS ON LEAVES || RUNNERS || SUCKERS || BULBS

Some plants produce new plants on their own. You can propagate them by planting these new ones.

Viviparous leaves. The bryophyllum plant and some kalanchoes have this kind of leaf. This means that small plants from on the edges of the leaves. Another one that is fairly common is the hen and chickens fern (called that because you take the little "chicken" ferns off the leaf of the main fern, and can plant them so they grow into another fern!)You can pick them off and pot them in a regular soil mix.


This is another kind of fern, not a hen and chicken

A runner is along stem that produces new plants at its nodes. You can remove the runner with its small plant and root it under plastic or you can simply set a small pot of good soil near the parent plant and fasten the runner to the soil. When the runner plant roots, cut it free.

Stawberry plants grow like this, and so does lamium. If you want to see how this works, ask Miss Currie to bring you in some lamium from her garden.

Suckers. Some trees and shrubs send up suckers from their roots. These are shoots that can be dug up and cut free, then planted.

Separation of bulbs (tulip, narcissus, hyacinth, amaryllis) or corms (gladiolus, crocus) means breaking off the small bulbs or corms that form around a large one. Each of these can then be planted in the garden.


Cross section of a daffodil bulb. Small bulbs will later grow around the base.

 

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