I had given a gal pal some Spider
plants this
spring, & now she wants to know what to do with the babies that have formed on the runners, sent out by the Mommy
plant. I don't know how other people get them started on their way to
growing up & becoming Mommy
plants themselves, as I suppose there is more than one way.... but this is how I do it.
The babies can stay on the runners for a long, long time, but if you want to you can snip them off & start them rooting. I've never had any luck just sticking them in the dirt with the Mommy
plant, because it's hard to keep the soil wet enough without over-watering Mama & causing damage to her. (I think that can be done though,
without taking them off the runner.)
They're so easy to root in water, it just seems like the easiest way to deal with them, & it's always worked for me.
Being a genuine retired school teacher probably won't happen until I'm six feet under, because I keep coming up with things to go back to the school for... I talked to the 1st/2nd grade teacher this morning & will be taking about half the babies off my wall next week
(there are 22 of them), & taking them in to the kids so they can start rooting them.
After a few weeks with their bottoms in water, the
plants will have established their initial "water roots" & will probably be ready to start making some "dirt roots".
Putting a water-rooted Spider
plant directly in a pot with soil will often result in a dead
plant, so we'll be adding a bit of potting soil every few days (keeping it pretty soggy at first, so "dirt roots" can form), until we've finally got potted Spider
plants for the kids to take home as Christmas gifts.
(Once the
plants have settled in, holes will be punched in the bottoms of the pre-decorated Styrofoam cups, to provide proper drainage.)
Established Spider plants DO NOT like to have their feet wet! To illustrate the difference between the two types of roots:This one has been finished making of "water roots" for quite some time (the thicker, green ones), but I just never got around to adding dirt until a week or so ago. There doesn't seem to be a set "time limit" for the water-to-soil process, but when "dirt roots" are well established, adequate drainage is essential.
The new white roots, that you see here, are the "dirt roots".
(I removed it from it's soil/water mixture & rinsed the roots off, for this picture.)*** I haven't done it myself, but I would think that they would develop a healthy set of roots from the beginning --
without rooting them in water first -- if the crowns were to sit in soggy soil for a week or so, gradually letting the soil become dryer as the roots form.