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| I purchased it a year or more ago from Walgreens/Lowes/HD and misplaced the tag. I cant for the life of me remember what the heck it was and multiple, multiple, multiple different google image searches have yeilded no matches. I think it had pepper in the name but its not a pepper plant (produces fruit or anything like that). |
Follow-Up Postings:
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| Peperomia |
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| Nice, thats it! Any idea which one or how to propagate it? |
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- Posted by purpleinopp 8b AL (My Page) on Tue, Feb 26, 13 at 17:17
| P. obtusifolia? I've |
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| I was just doing some reading about it and decided to cut a lower leaf and put it in the moist soil. We shall see what happens! |
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- Posted by teengardener1888 5a (My Page) on Tue, Feb 26, 13 at 19:07
| i new that was pepperomia. my princible has one and ive suspected that. please share how to propagate |
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| These can readily be propagated by taking a 4-6 inch stem cutting. Remove the lower leaves on the cutting and insert into moist potting medium. (You can't just take off a leaf as was mentioned earlier.) That plant appears to be severely deprived of light. I strongly suggest that the new cutting be positioned in a better location. |
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| I like the leggy office look! Being stretched, growing slower and requiring less frequent watering are all good things in my book. Its quite robust and the leaves are beautiful thick and succulent. Why would I want to mess that up? |
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- Posted by FrugalFanny 4 (My Page) on Thu, Feb 28, 13 at 14:40
| I have propagated these from both cuttings and single leaves, all in soil. Once a leaf grows a new plant, you can remove the new plant and use that same leaf to grow yet another plant! I don't know how many times this can be done from the same leaf, but it is possible. The photo is of a peperomia I started from a single leaf. You can use a little rooting hormone to help the process along, but it is not necessary. Good luck! |
This post was edited by FrugalFanny on Thu, Feb 28, 13 at 14:45
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| I'm fairly certain the reason my Peperomia is slouching is because the light in my office has been off for longer thank normal. Look like thats the problem? |
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| Because the plant has been grown in much less light than it needs in order to develop properly, the stem is terribly weak. The taller the plant, the more difficult it is for it to support itself. This is not a recent event but started early on as this plant started to stretch and become spindly. |
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| I thought you'd be the one to post back. If only you would have told me this was going to happen earlier! ;) Seriously though, I guess I just need to trim the branches and start rotating it back and forth from my office to a spot nearer a window perhaps. |
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