Beautiful succulent collection and some ideas for your garden. Let us help to take care your succulents 👉 Succulent DIY channel: • 14 Succulent DIY Ideas... #shorts #Succulents #多肉植物 #다육이들 #Suculentas #plants #flowerplant
It heavily depends on how fast they'll be able to dry based on your environment. If it's particularly warm or bright, they'll likely be able to dry in time and be just fine. I'm pretty sure this poster lives somewhere that they can keep succents outside year-round, so it's probably a warm and dry environment. But yeah, to be safe, it's generally a better idea to not get the leaves of your succulents too wet.
They should have added in the part where they put some kind of solution succulents love. I usually do this with fish emulsion fertilizer. Also Once it’s in the pot I would not put it in the Sun. Put it in a cool spot maybe even fan it until it’s dry.
I treat my succulents so delicately I don’t dare breathe too hard, yet they still die. Meanwhile this person plopping them into water but they’re all beautiful and full…
if you're succulents are dying its because you won't leave them alone. these guys thrive off of neglect, don't need water until the soil is bone dry, don't need pruning unless they're thriving etc
for the people saying dont do this, in a large scale succulent nursery, these plants are shipped bare root (little to no roots) and need water before being potted in order to develop new root growth. dunking them in water allows the succulent to absorb water through the pores on their leaves. they shouldn't be soaked for more than at least 3 hours at a time.
Succulents store water in their leaves. Submerging them does nothing beneficial for them. Im sure the nurseries and stores do it to make them look shiny and clean. Because most succulents have a white powdery substance [no, not that!] on their leaves that protects them from sun damage. Washing the leaves or touching them constantly removes that stuff and leads to brown spots, considering succulents need direct sunlight once you take them home. It takes a while until their protection grows back. But ofc they look more "vibrant" without their powder....
Indirect sunlight when small and first home. Gradually partial direct sunlight when the young succulents begin to show new growth. Leave them outdoor when they are fully estsblished.
For the majority of people: don’t do this. Instead, you need to let your freshly cut succulent heads completely dry out. For at least a few days to a week. Only then replant and add small amounts of water.
@@GordoGuapo202they don't need soil to grow new roots😂... But if you plant then in wet soil right after cutting, or the pot will be outside and it will rain your succulent has all chances to rot
actually like someone else said if they dry out quickly it shouldnt be a problem. its only if the water sits on them long enough you risk them getting fungal infections or rotting
Why not? Gets them plump up before potting them. As long as it’s warm enough outside and you remove any sitting water within the leaves and crown. I’ve left succulents in water like this for days after forgetting about them and they were perfectly fine.
I wouldn't do this to succulents!! You cray-cray!! I also don't understand the point in doing this. Some succulents don't like water on their leaves or water in the crevices. It will cause the plant to rot. If your doing this for pests, there's other ways to get rid of them. Trying DE powder or let the spil dry out completely before watering, or use a diluted mixture of insecticide w/ 3% peroxide, a few drops of organic soap and a few drops of neem oil and a couple drops of peppermint oil. Mix it with water to dilute it. This was OK to use on my succulents. It didn't help the soil mites lol. So I used DE powder....but peppermint oil will kill them too (only use a small amount though!). Nematodes will also work for pests in plants. I just added them to my plants bcuz I have fungus gnats and soil mites and they won't go away😩😫 😰😱😱😭😭😤😤😤🤬🤬🤬🤬
Como uiero unas suculentas asi pero no tengo espacio suficiente ni tanto sol en mi departo .Tengo en cada rincom donde pueda pero no me alcanza para más 😁
I have a succulent that I put in a small hanging pot in a window and I completely forgot about it. It's been at least 2 years and it's thriving. I'm thinking leave them alone and they grow.
@Lyric yes because I got it for Christmas. I live in a humid place so I assume it gets water from the air. I'm not going to bother it at this point. I tell her to keep doing her thing.
@MrSnuggs but its so beautiful. I used to try to water succulents and the leaves would start to fall off. I live in a humid environment so it gets what it needs from the air.
@@seiyuokamihimura5082 many insects that inhabit the plants are too small and therefore don't break the surface tension. They end up being hydrophobic the only way around this is to add something to the water
I do this with new succulents. I add a special solution from insects and bugs to the water. 15-20 minutes, they swim in the water, that's enough. I let them dry for 4-5 days. And only then I transplant it into a new pot. I prefer LECHUZA PON plant substrate. After transplantation, the first watering in 2-3 days.
Succulents store water in their leaves. Submerging them does nothing beneficial for them. I guess nurseries and stores do it to make them look shiny and clean. Because most succulents have a white powdery substance [no, not that!] on their leaves that protects them from sun damage. Washing the leaves or touching them constantly removes that stuff and leads to brown spots, considering succulents need direct sunlight once you take them home. It takes a while until their protection grows back. But ofc they look more "vibrant" without their powder....
I've been growing and collecting for 48 years and I'm telling you it's not a good idea to do that. I can't imagine what benefit it could ever have other than cleaning the leaves from soil but still not good at all. No wonder it's just a short vid. Let me guess... they sell plants. Sometimes sellers don't want your plants to survive so you have to buy more...
This isn’t helpful at all. These are videos with no explanation. How are these tips? For all I know this water is treated with fertilizer. Guess we’ll never know…
Everyone is concerned about doing it or not doing it… All I see are beautiful succulents & wondering how in the world they grow them to be that beautiful?
Pienso que estás personas tienen un vivero o algo así,sus plantas a pesar de lo que les hacen siempre están lindas. Yo a las mías si acaso una por una😅😢las cuido como oro en paño😅😅
Confusing info in this comment section, lot of fear of rot. Water alone does not rot succulents, did you know you can grow succulents in water? What causes rot is the combination of water for long period with organic soil or combination of water and heat/cold/ direct sunlight, and dirty water too... What they do here is what I usually do when I receive bare roots succulents from the mail, they come dehydrated (wrinkles on leaves) and depending on the severity I would leave them in water with seaweed solution from 3 hours up to 12 hours.
You'll probably want to take them inside in the monsoon, or put them under cover as if they get sun on them while they're wet they can burn. Water them enough in the dry heat. they like water, they don't like being constantly moist. Water them when their soil dries out.
Я не знаю, в городе вы живете или нет. Если в городе, походите по магазинам, торгующим растениями, по рынкам, иногда можно найти у бабушек, у нас продавали в Магните. Если в городе вы бываете не часто, при каждой поездке про делайте все, что я уже перечислила. Также слышала о торговле растениями в интернете, не пробовала, не знаю. Только для этого надо знать названия.
"Why are they being submerged" To kill pests and removes dirt. I know on one of the last plantsin the water/first couple he picked, they were notably cleaner. I saw the dust on the green ones and how it was removed after. Easier to do them all at once tbh, just make sure that absolutely no water is on the plant without the next 10/20 minutes