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How to have success with succulents

<p><strong>Sensational succulents</strong></p> <p>Succulents have long been recognised as pot-plant superstars. They look good throughout the year, feature an enormous variety of leaf shapes and sizes and are low maintenance. Some even have beautiful flowers.</p> <p>Perfect for time-poor gardeners, they won’t die if you are occasionally too busy to water them. And when released from the confines of containers, succulents can be used to create fantastic contemporary garden beds.</p> <p>Succulents live naturally in dry and arid parts of the world so they are very waterwise and perfect for those hot, dry sunny areas in gardens where little else will grow. Known as xerophytes, they have developed storage structures in their leaves, stems or roots that hoard enough water to survive periods of drought.</p> <p>Succulents are very hard to kill but give them some TLC and you will be rewarded.</p> <p>Position your succulent in a sunny spot. Lack of light will cause it to become elongated and turn the leaves pale, and eventually it will collapse.</p> <p>Plant in a potting mix especially formulated for cacti and succulents.</p> <p>Feed in spring with a six-month slow-release fertiliser such as Osmocote. Or use a soluble fertiliser in early spring, summer and autumn.</p> <p>Water when the potting mix is nearly dry and do not overwater, as succulents dislike wet feet. Once established, a weekly watering is sufficient for most potted succulents.</p> <p><strong>Grow in garden beds</strong></p> <p>Create a stunning contemporary garden bed with a mix of succulents.</p> <p>Use different heights and shapes to create interesting foliage forms and combine them with waterwise perennials and shrubs for a low-maintenance bed.</p> <p>Mulch around the succulents with black, greyor white pebbles for a stylish look and to prevent weeds from growing.</p> <p>Prepare well-draining soil – a sloping bank is ideal. If drainage is a problem, use a raised bed. Do not overwater, as most succulents can survive on rainwater only.</p> <p>Feed in spring and summer with an all-purpose plant fo </p> <p><strong>Design ideas</strong></p> <p>Group various types together with different leaf shapes and colours to create interesting displays in pots and garden beds.</p> <p>Use any container that has drainage holes. It doesn’t have to be a garden pot – old shoes, baskets, teapots, tins, even old benches can all make interesting receptacles for succulents.</p> <p>Plant flat, rosette-shaped succulents such as echeveria and sempervivums in low bowls.</p> <p>Grow tall sculptural plants such as agave in large pots to make a statement.</p> <p>Position low-growing succulents such as sedums, echeveria, Cotyledon orbiculata, sempervivum and Senecio serpens as groundcovers.</p> <p>Establish succulents in hot, dry, sunny areas where it is difficult to get other plants to grow.</p> <p>Arrange large succulents in a minimalist style with just a few sculptural plants set in areas of gravel or stone.</p> <p>Display trailing succulents like rhipsalis, jelly bean plant and burro’s tail in tall urns or hanging baskets.</p> <p>Grow succulents under eaves on hot, west-facing sunny walls.</p> <p><strong>Increase supply</strong></p> <p>Succulents are easy to propagate in spring and summer. Pot some for Christmas presents and swap extra cuttings with gardening friends. We show you how to increase your supply.</p> <p><strong>Offsets and suckers</strong></p> <p>Offsets are small plantlets that develop from the parent plant and are simply detached and replanted.</p> <p>Suitable succulents: Some echeveria, aloes, agaves and sempervivums.</p> <p>How to: Remove the parent plant and offsets from the pot or ground. Gently pull the offsets from the parent plant or cut them off with secateurs. Remove any old leaves around the bases and replant into new potting mix.</p> <p><strong>Stem cuttings</strong></p> <p>Succulents are one of the easiest plants to grow from stem cuttings.</p> <p>Suitable succulents: Aeoniums, cotyledons and kalanchoes.</p> <p>How to: Cleanly cut the stem from the parent plant to the length you want and place it in a dry, shady spot for about one week to callus. Then plant the cutting directly where you want it to grow.</p> <p>Read on for 8 of the best succulents to grow.</p> <p><strong>Agaves</strong></p> <p>Agaves, especially the popular greyish green-leaved Agave attenuata, have a great architectural shape. Most have spines on their leaves so take care where they are placed.</p> <p><strong>Echeverias</strong></p> <p>Echeverias are great for pots or rock beds. There is a good choice of leaf colours, sizes and their bell-shaped flowers look good in a vase. They can withstand the cold if the soil is dry and they’re not exposed to too much rain.</p> <p><strong>Sempervivums</strong></p> <p>Sempervivums are commonly called ‘hen and chickens’ because of the way they multiply. The ‘chickens’ grow from the base of the ‘hen’ and are attached by a thin stem which can be detached and replanted. They revel in cool climates and don’t need much soil to survive.</p> <p><strong>Aeoniums</strong></p> <p>Aeoniums range from groundcovers to branching plants up to 1.5m high. The bronze and green-leaved Aeonium atropurpureum and its dark maroon-leaved cultivar ‘Schwartkop’ look stunning in pots. Aeonium undulatum has large rosettes, 15-30cm in diameter, and green leaves.</p> <p><strong>Cotyledons</strong></p> <p>Cotyledons are loved for their showy thick grey or green leaves and pretty bell-shaped flowers. They don’t mind winter rainfall and they can tolerate frost.</p> <p><strong>Yuccas</strong></p> <p>Yuccas have great architectural shape but many grow leaves with a terminal spine, so take care where you place them in the garden. Look for Yucca elephantipes that is spineless and will grow in sun, shade and even indoors.</p> <p><strong>Kalanchoes</strong></p> <p>Kalanchoes are grown for their interesting leaves and pretty flowers and range in size from groundcovers to large shrubs. Foliage colours vary from silver, grey, green and pink to red, and they can be flecked or variegated.</p> <p><strong>Sedums</strong></p> <p>Sedums range from groundcovering plants to the autumn-flowering Sedum spectabile, which reaches a height around 60cm. Most are evergreen but some die down during winter and reappear in spring. Jelly bean plant (Sedum rubrotinctum) and burro’s tail (Sedum morganianum) have a trailing habit perfect for hanging baskets.</p> <p><em>Image credit: Shutterstock</em></p> <p><em>This article originally appeared on <a href="https://www.readersdigest.co.nz/food-home-garden/gardening-how-to-grow/how-to-have-success-with-succulents?pages=2" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Reader's Digest</a>. </em></p>

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Success with succulents

<p>Succulents have long been recognised as pot-plant superstars. They look good throughout the year, feature an enormous variety of leaf shapes and sizes and are low maintenance. Some even have beautiful flowers.</p><p>Perfect for time-poor gardeners, they won’t die if you are occasionally too busy to water them. And when released from the confines of containers, succulents can be used to create fantastic contemporary garden beds.</p><p>Succulents live naturally in dry and arid parts of the world so they are very waterwise and perfect for those hot, dry sunny areas in gardens where little else will grow. Known as xerophytes, they have developed storage structures in their leaves, stems or roots that hoard enough water to survive periods of drought.</p><p><strong>Grown them in pots</strong></p><p>Succulents are very hard to kill but give them some TLC and you will be rewarded.</p><p>Position your succulent in a sunny spot. Lack of light will cause it to become elongated and turn the leaves pale, and eventually it will collapse.</p><p>Plant in a potting mix especially formulated for cacti and succulents.</p><p>Feed in spring with a six-month slow-release fertiliser such as Osmocote. Or use a soluble fertiliser in early spring, summer and autumn.</p><p>Water when the potting mix is nearly dry and do not overwater, as succulents dislike wet feet. Once established, a weekly watering is sufficient for most potted succulents.</p><p><strong>Grow them in garden beds</strong></p><p>Create a stunning contemporary garden bed with a mix of succulents.</p><p>Use different heights and shapes to create interesting foliage forms and combine them with waterwise perennials and shrubs for a low-maintenance bed.</p><p>Mulch around the succulents with black, greyor white pebbles for a stylish look and to prevent weeds from growing.</p><p>Prepare well-draining soil – a sloping bank is ideal. If drainage is a problem, use a raised bed. Do not overwater, as most succulents can survive on rainwater only.</p><p>Feed in spring and summer with an all-purpose plant food.</p><p><strong>Design ideas</strong></p><p>Group various types together with different leaf shapes and colours to create interesting displays in pots and garden beds.</p><p>Use any container that has drainage holes. It doesn’t have to be a garden pot – old shoes, baskets, teapots, tins, even old benches can all make interesting receptacles for succulents.</p><p>Plant flat, rosette-shaped succulents such as echeveria and sempervivums in low bowls.</p><p>Grow tall sculptural plants such as agave in large pots to make a statement.</p><p>Position low-growing succulents such as sedums, echeveria, Cotyledon orbiculata, sempervivum and Senecio serpens as groundcovers.</p><p>Establish succulents in hot, dry, sunny areas where it is difficult to get other plants to grow.</p><p>Arrange large succulents in a minimalist style with just a few sculptural plants set in areas of gravel or stone.</p><p>Display trailing succulents like rhipsalis, jelly bean plant and burro’s tail in tall urns or hanging baskets.</p><p>Grow succulents under eaves on hot, west-facing sunny walls.</p><p><strong>Increase supply</strong></p><p>Succulents are easy to propagate in spring and summer. Pot some for Christmas presents and swap extra cuttings with gardening friends. We show you how to increase your supply.</p><p><strong>Offsets and suckers</strong></p><p>Offsets are small plantlets that develop from the parent plant and are simply detached and replanted.</p><p>Suitable succulents: Some echeveria, aloes, agaves and sempervivums.</p><p>How to: Remove the parent plant and offsets from the pot or ground. Gently pull the offsets from the parent plant or cut them off with secateurs. Remove any old leaves around the bases and replant into new potting mix.</p><p><strong>Stem cuttings</strong></p><p>Succulents are one of the easiest plants to grow from stem cuttings.</p><p>Suitable succulents: Aeoniums, cotyledons and kalanchoes.</p><p>How to: Cleanly cut the stem from the parent plant to the length you want and place it in a dry, shady spot for about one week to callus. Then plant the cutting directly where you want it to grow.</p><p>Read on for 8 of the best succulents to grow.</p><p><strong>Agaves</strong></p><p>Agaves, especially the popular greyish green-leaved Agave attenuata, have a great architectural shape. Most have spines on their leaves so take care where they are placed.</p><p><strong>Echeverias</strong></p><p>Echeverias are great for pots or rock beds. There is a good choice of leaf colours, sizes and their bell-shaped flowers look good in a vase. They can withstand the cold if the soil is dry and they’re not exposed to too much rain.</p><p><strong>Aeoniums </strong></p><p>Aeoniums range from groundcovers to branching plants up to 1.5m high. The bronze and green-leaved Aeonium atropurpureum and its dark maroon-leaved cultivar ‘Schwartkop’ look stunning in pots. Aeonium undulatum has large rosettes, 15-30cm in diameter, and green leaves.</p><p><strong>Cotyledons</strong> </p><p>Cotyledons are loved for their showy thick grey or green leaves and pretty bell-shaped flowers. They don’t mind winter rainfall and they can tolerate frost.</p><p><strong>Yuccas</strong></p><p> Yuccas have great architectural shape but many grow leaves with a terminal spine, so take care where you place them in the garden. Look for Yucca elephantipes that is spineless and will grow in sun, shade and even indoors.</p><p><strong>Kalanchoes</strong></p><p>Kalanchoes are grown for their interesting leaves and pretty flowers and range in size from groundcovers to large shrubs. Foliage colours vary from silver, grey, green and pink to red, and they can be flecked or variegated.</p><p><strong>Sedums</strong></p><p>Sedums range from groundcovering plants to the autumn-flowering Sedum spectabile, which reaches a height around 60cm. Most are evergreen but some die down during winter and reappear in spring. Jelly bean plant (Sedum rubrotinctum) and burro’s tail (Sedum morganianum) have a trailing habit perfect for hanging baskets.</p><p>This article originally appeared on <a href="https://www.readersdigest.com.au/food-home-garden/gardening-how-to-grow/how-to-have-success-with-succulents?pages=1">Reader's Digest</a>. </p>

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How to grow succulents from cuttings

<p><strong><em>Better Homes and Gardens’ resident landscaper, Jason Hodges, shares his top tips for growing succulents from cuttings.</em></strong></p> <p>If you love your garden, there’s a good chance you’ve got some succulents in the ground or in pots. They provide a wonderful contrast of colours, shapes and textures to the green of your garden but they can get “leggie” and lose their appeal.</p> <p>Well don’t fear. From what looks like a spent succulent you can grow a whole new generation of plants. They are so easy to strike, I believe anyone can do it.</p> <p>Succulents grow towards the sunlight and can form a trunk that isn’t desirable causing the leaves to be spaced widely apart and giving the appearance that the plant is on its last legs. Don’t chuck it out or try to nurse it. This is the time to break it down for spare parts and propagate it.</p> <p><strong>From one leggie succulent you can propagate three different ways:</strong></p> <ol> <li>The top still looks good so can be removed and planted again to create a new plant that looks good straight away.</li> <li>Each of the leaves along the leggie stem can be peeled off and placed into some well-draining potting mix. They will all produce new plants. Once you have new aerial roots you can remove the old leaf and plant on. This is the easiest way to propagate many plants that are uniform in size.</li> <li>The root-ball and just the slightest part of the trunk will reshoot too. This will grow quite quickly as the root-ball is the engine of the plant and provides lots of energy for the new growth to establish.</li> </ol> <p>Propagating succulents is a fun and cheap project for kids. They are soft-tissue plants that are easy to cut and small so there’s no heavy lifting and being small, there’s no hard digging either.</p> <p>Cuttings can be replanted with a pencil or paddle pop stick. Before you plant or propagate, allow the plant to heal or scab over. This will reduce the loss of water that would leave the plant through gravity.</p> <p>Once you are sure they are dry, they are ready for planting. Now most gardeners have a bag or two of potting mix at home but you need either specific cactus and succulent mix or add an equal amount of coarse river sand together with your potting mix to create a free-draining mix that won’t rot your plants.</p> <p>For the quickest results, do this in spring but I propagate succulents at the start of winter as I am looking for jobs in the garden and I can see the succulents that look poor or leggie and need freshening up.</p> <p>To protect them from the cold I place them in a sheltered sunny spot and rarely water them until I see lots of new growth.</p> <p>If done now, come spring the mother leaf (the leaf removed from the stem) can be removed and the new plant can be planted on to a new home.</p> <p>Succulent bowls and displays can cost hundreds of dollars and individual succulents from nurseries and markets at $5 or $10 each soon add up but taking a tired old succulent and turning it into many new plants is free and easy.</p> <p>They make great presents and always put a smile on the recipients face. After all, a homegrown gift has more meaning. The fact it didn’t cost you a cent is a bonus.</p> <p><em>Written by Jason Hodges. First appeared on <a href="http://www.domain.com.au/" target="_blank"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Domain.com.au</span></strong></a>.</em></p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><a href="/lifestyle/home-garden/2016/08/the-trick-to-growing-herbs-in-a-pot/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>The trick to growing herbs in a pot</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="/lifestyle/home-garden/2016/07/how-to-make-a-no-dig-garden/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>How to make a no dig garden</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="/lifestyle/home-garden/2016/05/garden-fixes-after-heavy-rain/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>Garden fixes after heavy rain</strong></em></span></a></p>

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How-to mini succulent planters fridge magnets

<p>Here’s a great use for those wine corks you’ve been throwing away – make them into cute magnetic succulent planters to stick to your fridge. It’s a fun and unique way to brighten up your kitchen with a little colour, and succulents are such low-maintenance that you can pretty much stick them on and enjoy their beauty without worrying about taking care of them.</p> <p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">What you’ll need:</span></strong></p> <ul> <li>Wine corks</li> <li>Succulent clippings</li> <li>Soil</li> <li>Small magnets</li> <li>Hot glue gun (or strong craft glue is fine)</li> <li>Phillips head screwdriver</li> <li>Paring knife</li> <li>Newspaper</li> </ul> <p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Method:</span></strong></p> <ol> <li>Lay a sheet of newspaper down on your work surface to catch all the cork shavings.</li> <li>Use the head of your screwdriver to punch a small hole in the cork.</li> <li>Carefully use the paring knife to carve out that hole into a deeper cavity that goes about halfway down the cork. Don’t go too close to the edges, or you may split the cork.</li> <li>Glue a magnet to the back of the cork and let it dry completely.</li> <li>Add a little soil to the cavity in the cork and plant your succulent clippings in. Add a little more soil to fill up the cork.</li> <li>Arrange your magnets on the fridge and admire your handiwork, you clever person.</li> </ol> <p><em>Image credit: UpcycleThat</em></p>

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