How To Revive And Repot Aloe Vera Plants - Transforming Overgrown Aloe Vera Into Attractive Plants.
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- čas přidán 5. 08. 2024
- How to revive and repot aloe vera plants, including selecting aloe vera offsets, preparing growing media, dividing plants, repotting plants, watering frequency, and where to position aloe vera plants indoors. A step by step guide for anyone with overgrown aloe vera plants, or aloe vera plants that look discoloured with pale yellow or brown leaves.
Full contents as follows:
00:00 Introduction
01:50 Choosing the best pots for aloe vera plants
03:53 Choosing the best growing media for aloe vera plants
04:40 Preparing the growing media
05:39 Repotting Example 1: Small aloe vera plant
09:02 Repotting Example 2: Large aloe vera plant
13:03 How to water aloe vera plants
15:02 How aloe vera plants look after repotting
15:12 Where to position aloe vera plants indoors
For more gardening tips and advice, please see my website:
www.allotmentbook.co.uk/ - Jak na to + styl
Thank you.
a very informative video, I would remove dry lower leaves though...
Amazing and insightful video
What type of aloe is this? I have the same kind, but can't find the actual name of this type anywhere
I have a fan aloe. It got too wet so is there any way to prop the single leaves?
Sorry I can't answer your question - I've never grown a fan aloe!
Thank you for this video. I always sadly kill Aloe Vera but watching this has encouraged me to try again as I can see where I was going wrong. I recently had a spider plant that was quite heavily pot bound and was unable to tease the roots, I found a website that advised to soak the roots in luke warm water and tease them apart gently then afterwards keep the plant well watered so it can recover. I did this and was able to free the roots and replant in a much bigger pot and it looks as if it's recovering well. Is this a method you would recommend and if so are there circumstances in which you would NOT use this method and cut the roots as you have in this video? Thanks, Emma.
Thank you very much for your comment! I have not used the technique you describe, but it sounds a good one, and probably most suitable for small plants? The cutting method I used works well when the roots are very tangled together and difficult to separate. You may like to see this page on the RHS website which outlines more ways: www.rhs.org.uk/plants/types/perennials/dividing.
@@AllotmentBook Thank you 🙂
My Aloe Vera won't stop growing. I had to give Aloe of them away, and couple weeks later I counted over 50 Aloe Vera baby plants in 1 pot 🙈
Thank you very much for your comment!