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Tag: Pothos

Repotting Rhea

Posted on November 26, 2024November 26, 2024

Rhea has a name, because of course she does, she was my first 🙂 The first pothos cutting I grew on a moss pole, after moving back to America and losing my plant baby to the TSA. I took her as a cutting off of a beautiful pot of Epipremnum Aureum I bought from the grocery store. I have a few cuttings from this same plant thriving now as healthy individuals… but Rhea is the most spectacular. Each leaf she spits out is bigger and more wonderful than the last, the biggest pothos leaves I’ve ever seen indoors (in person). But today, the few leaves that were there when she was still just a cutting had finally whithered- whether from lack of sunlight or overwatering, I do not know, but she was already growing too tall for the UV lights I supplement her with. So I decided it was finally time to repot her.

First, I removed the leaves that were on the lowest part of her stem, about four or five. Then I used wire cutters to snip the plastic free and removed as much of the moss as I could without disturbing her roots. I wrapped them around inside a new pot and put fresh soil on top. She is now a third shorter, with more room to grow her roots as well as continuing her vertical ascent.

The small plant on the upper left is part of the same exact plant I took Rhea from. The magic of a moss pole!

My Climbers

Posted on November 4, 2024November 4, 2024

A video I captured of my climbers at home.

@sillyquark I love plants that climb like this! fun fact: neither of these is a true "pothos", they are philodendron and Epipremnum aureum. 🪴 🌱 🌿 The name Pothos is acceptable colloquially for both, because language is made up anyway 🥰 #plants ♬ Relaxed (Sped Up) – MC Mablo Dos Paredões

My most stunning specimen, a Golden Pothos, climbing at my office:

Basketing Pothos

Posted on November 4, 2024November 4, 2024

You snip off a long trailing vine of pothos, and propagate it in water. It roots within weeks, begging for soil. Now what?

Basket weave it! After planting the rooted end, lay the vine along the top of the basket so each node is touching the soil. Mist regularly, and as each node sends its own roots, that particular vine will grow heartier and more sturdy, and send out bigger and bigger leaves.

This is why I like to “basket weave” them in a circle, so I can cover as much of the surface area of the pot as possible. Pothos will do this wonderful bit of magic, where it arranges all of its leaves in such a way that they all get maximum exposure to sunlight. Its quite beautiful, how it fans out in a circle:

Pothos, Aroids, and Nomenclature Musings

Posted on November 3, 2024November 3, 2024

The aroids have my heart… pothos isn’t truly a pothos, anyway, and monstera deliciosa never was to begin with… nevertheless, whether it is a common Global Jade Pothos or a Thai Constellation Monstera or a swirling Heartleaf Philodendron… in my mind (and the minds of many others) these plants belong in a category together, and they are all more related than not… after all, they are all aroids.

Like the name suggests, “aroids” grow best in “air”; or, more specifically, they grow best in a medium that gives their roots ample room to breathe. A chunky, soil-less mixture of micorrhizae, coconut coir fiber, and large stones of perlite or clay leca balls helps these plants to recreate their natural tendency to “climb”, as they make trees their vertical substrate in the wild. The plants have two distinct stages: during the first, immature stage, the plants are recognizable to us as the internationally popular houseplants we know and love, growing heartily in all directions in search of support. The plant can exist in this stage indefinitely. If a vertical support is found, however, the plant will begin to climb, and subsequently enter a mature stage where it will dramatically change in appearance, and in very rare occasions it will even flower.

Pothos was categorized as “pothos” long before these botanists had ever seen the plant in its mature stage. It was later reclassified as Epipremnum Areum, and is not even in the Pothos family! However, if I show my “pothos” on the internet, people will quickly jump into the comments to say, “WELL, ACTUALLY… THAT ONE IS A PHILODENDRON.”

And to all these taxonomic fascists I would like to say:

You are RIGHT. It ISN’T a pothos… techinically. But also, technically… none of these are!

Words are symbols we use to communicate. Saying “I like Pothos” is still the easiest way to communicate to another plant lover what types of plants I like! We users of language are the ones who agree on accepted meaning. I’m going to stick to calling them all “pothos”, and move on.

Why do I like Pothos so much?? The way that it grows. Its vibrancy. The ability to adapt to so many different indoor spaces, unfussy, simple to grow. The ease with which it propagates. It rarely flowers, as it lost the need to, from an evolutionary standpoint. The plant propagates itself so easily, with an excessive growth hormone released in its juvenile stage that causes it to explore and search in all directions. I have only recently begun to grow them climbing on moss poles (post update on those to come) and it is fascinating to watch their progress: each new leaf on a climbing node is bigger, brighter, more splendid than any pothos leaf I have seen yet.

Mixed Pothos

Posted on October 30, 2024October 30, 2024

My latest experiment is mixing Pothos varieties together, all propagated from my mother plants. Here are two over spilling pots of Neon, Pearls and Jade, and Golden. Only one of the Monstera plants (not pictured) seems to be suffering, she was the smallest so maybe she was just overtaken too quickly.

My Home Jungle

Posted on October 29, 2024October 29, 2024

Every morning, every evening, I come to my little jungle corner, with my parrotlet on my shoulder, and admire all of my beautiful green things.

I am so excited to see all the new growth, every day, little by little: progress is perfection.

My Office Jungle

Posted on October 29, 2024October 29, 2024

This is what gets me to work every day. I have so many Pothos/Pothos type plants (more later on this nomenclature frustration) and watching them grow is a singular joy. This Golden Pothos was the first propagation I decided to train on a moss pole; she started the obsession, and you can see why. She is so lush, so unbelievably green, and downright tenacious in her vertical ambitions. Every leaf thrown out the top of her node is more spectacular than the previous, and up and down the stalk they all extend their hands toward the light. She has an agenda, and she’s going for it.

Right now, they are bigger than my hand. A new leaf will unfurl; this is reason enough to get out of bed each day. I’m also falling heavily in love with my Cebu Blue (pictured hanging in the back), she perked up with her new aroid mixture.

Cebu Blue (Epipremnum Pinnatum)

Posted on October 5, 2024October 6, 2024

Fresh out of and spilling over the box, with long, dragon-tailed vines dangling to the floor. Her leaves are different to the others- paper-flat, long, silvery-blue daggers pointing downward in their dozens. This one seems to sag under the weight of gravity, rather than float above its influence like a Golden or Hawaiian. I give her a day under the lights to dry out her soil and soak up enough energy before repotting in a 10 inch hanging planter. Six stems were removed for water propagation.

One at home has been pruned back substantially, but the one at the office received minimal pruning and I wrapped it’s vines upward. I suspect this one is a slow grower; watching her unfold, daily check-ins over coffee and watery, early morning light. I can’t wait.

Her scientific name is Epipremnum Pinnatum, but I’ve decided to call her Orion, to keep with the Greek Mythology theme. Another “Pothos that isn’t a Pothos”, but considering even Pothos is no longer considered a true Pothos, well…

My Aroids, my Aureums…

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@sillyquark

  • Repotting RheaNovember 26, 2024
  • Thai ConstellationNovember 10, 2024
  • My ClimbersNovember 4, 2024
  • The Molt (?) ContinuesNovember 4, 2024
  • First Oil PaintingsNovember 4, 2024
  • Basketing PothosNovember 4, 2024
  • Bonsai BabiesNovember 4, 2024
  • Little PotsNovember 3, 2024
  • Tahini Bean Salad with Toasted RiceNovember 3, 2024
  • Pothos, Aroids, and Nomenclature MusingsNovember 3, 2024
  • Plastic YarnNovember 1, 2024
  • Mixed PothosOctober 30, 2024
  • My Home JungleOctober 29, 2024
  • Opal’s First MoltOctober 29, 2024
  • My Office JungleOctober 29, 2024

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