Quizzes & Puzzles34 mins ago
Urgent Advice On Yucca Gloriosa
Hi - urgent advice needed please from AB gardeners!
We have a beautiful 20 year old Yucca Gloriosa plant 4 ft tall growing in an enormous clay pot. It has been in this pot for the past 10 years and at the weekend we noticed the pot had suddenly broken (it is really thick too!) and it is obvious the huge rhizomes and roots have caused it to break. I'm now in a dilemma, I could attempt to plant it in our front garden but I would really like to keep it in a huge pot as it is in a lovely place on our patio which can be seen from the lounge. The pot it is in is approx 52cm in diameter so I would need a bigger pot which are difficult to find.
My question is would it be possible to cut just a few of the huge rhizomes off the sides of this plant without harming it - or are they vital to the life of the plant? I would hate to lose it as it was a Silver Wedding gift. If I could find a larger pot should I just lift the plant complete in its broken pot into the new one, or take it out of the broken pot first, as it is going to be so heavy and dangerous (very spiky) to transplant. Any ideas please folks? Thanks in advance :)
We have a beautiful 20 year old Yucca Gloriosa plant 4 ft tall growing in an enormous clay pot. It has been in this pot for the past 10 years and at the weekend we noticed the pot had suddenly broken (it is really thick too!) and it is obvious the huge rhizomes and roots have caused it to break. I'm now in a dilemma, I could attempt to plant it in our front garden but I would really like to keep it in a huge pot as it is in a lovely place on our patio which can be seen from the lounge. The pot it is in is approx 52cm in diameter so I would need a bigger pot which are difficult to find.
My question is would it be possible to cut just a few of the huge rhizomes off the sides of this plant without harming it - or are they vital to the life of the plant? I would hate to lose it as it was a Silver Wedding gift. If I could find a larger pot should I just lift the plant complete in its broken pot into the new one, or take it out of the broken pot first, as it is going to be so heavy and dangerous (very spiky) to transplant. Any ideas please folks? Thanks in advance :)
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Ann. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.According to the RHS you can propagate by removing the rooted suckers
http:// www.rhs .org.uk /Plants /65193/ Variega ted-Spa nish-da gger/De tails
http://
Personally I would get another pot with a larger diameter than the existing one if possible and then lift it out of it's old pot into the new one a momentous task I know but, it will be well worth it.Whilst you are doing it you could propagate some more plants into smaller pots as well.
I hope this helps
I hope this helps
ann - I had a similar experience many years back with the (now) huge rambling rose in my back garden - the roots broke out of the pot and in fact I found that the main root had grown through the hole in the bottom of the pot, and was way into the soil. I dind't want to move it - so I got some bricks and mortar and built a garden planter round the original root ball. I don't know if that would work for you, but it saves having to worry about future repotting, and my plant didn't mind at all!
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.