Sunday, October 17, 2010

Adenium

Take a cutting from a healthy, woody branch on the desert rose when the plant is not flowering. Measure five inches from the tip and cut at that point with pruning shears.




Pluck the leaves off of the cutting and dip the bottom into a rooting hormone. Follow the directions on the package which will tell you if you need to mix anything with the hormone.


Fill a small pot with one part peat and three parts perlite. This will create a sturdy rooting medium for the cutting and provide enough drainage so that the desert rose does not become waterlogged.

Water the medium just enough to dampen it and place it in a warm, protected area. Keep the rooting medium moist until the cutting begins to grow on its own and sprouts new leaves.

Inspect your cutting daily for water needs and to see if it is surviving. If it begins to wilt, try again with another cutting. Once it starts growing on its own you may transplant it to a larger pot, placing it in the


The desert rose, also called Adenium obesium, is actually not a rose at all, but a low-growing shrub in the periwinkle family. It is a succulent plant, which means that it retains water and can survive in arid environments, and grows best in USDA zones 10 and 11 where the temperature does not drop below 30 degrees F. Propagating the desert rose can be tricky if you do not know how to go about it. The seeds collected from an existing plant have not always been pollinated correctly and will not grow. Air layering is unpredictable and produces spotty results at best. Planting cuttings is the most effective way to propagate the plant.





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