Such an excellent video and your Aglaonema is gorgeous. Many thanks for this video and for sharing your knowledge of Aglaonemas. It’s very helpful. Great job! Take care! 👌🪴🥰
Missed you and thank you so much for your super awesome feedback, appreciated! Missed you - I seriously mean it as I remember you profile name, or else you might think I am replying as usual :-) Hope you are doing great, take care :-)
Your videos are excellent source of inspiration for plant lovers. Recently I lost my Chinese evergreen as there was some fungal attack , the new and existing leaves were rotting . I repotted but couldn't save it. 😢
Glad I could do something and thank you so much for your feedback, much appreciated! I already have a video and please watch this - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ZRVyjbI10wo.html Thank you once again!
Please see this - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ZRVyjbI10wo.html All info provided with 100% honest results (3 different methods), thank you!
You can go ahead and repot your plant providing fresh potting soil mix. While repotting, get rid of bit soil (not completely or else they may die) and then repot. It would grow well as it's the best time. I already have videos on Oxalis and please do a search as - "gardening upbeat oxalis" and it would give you the list of videos. I also need to repot one of my plant...Good luck!
Please try doing once in the Spring. They should produce new offshoots as as this is how nature works. Same happens when we prune a plant. The roots are going to absorb the nutrients from fresh and rich soil but they don't have anything on upper side. What they would do? For plants that don't produce new offshoots, they would start producing new branches, leaves and so on. For the others, they would definitely try producing offshoots before dying (they think it's the end and so they do produce. Similarly many flowering plants stop producing new flowers if we stop doing deadheading) Please note, I am referring to plants growing in pots. Same can't be applied to plants growing directly in ground. That's a total different story. Thank you for your inputs and Happy Gardening :-)