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Growing Spider Plants: Watering, Lighting, Propagation, and Pests
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I wonder if anyone has ever tried this or would care to try and predict the outcome...?
Spider plants can be grown with their roots in water—in fact, spider plant pups root quite well if started in water. However, if the plants are fully submerged, they usually end up rotting after a while. You’re better off getting a true aquatic plant for your aquarium!
I got a super small spider plant in December and 7 months later it looks 4x bigger! I repotted it once because it looked and felt droopy and roots were peeking out drainage holes. 3 months later, the plant is MASSIVE and more roots are starting to poke out again! I think the pot is quite big and I’ve read the plant doesn’t need that much repotting... is this normal or do I have to repot again? Thank you!
That is normal. Spider plants are content being pot bound—in fact, it may encourage them to flower and produce pups! If you want, you could remove it from its pot, trim off the roots that are starting to poke out and place it back in the same pot with some fresh soil. Or, simply leave it be.
My original spider plant has to be a great, x 10 or more grandma by now. Unfortunately I had to leave it behind when I moved but took some pieces to replant. During the last couple years, it grew, had a few pups then was somehow traumatized & went down to almost nothing. Very attached & determined, I kept the faith & it eventually became as pretty as ever. Now, however the leaves bend & crease & there have not been any pups since. I have taken good care of this (my favorite) plant for 30yrs or more & have gifted many pups. What's wrong?
As the other commenter said, you could try repotting in fresh soil, or you could try giving the plant a weak fertilizer. Spider plants can be sensitive to too much salt (nutrients) in their water, so use a diluted solution.
Report in good fast draining soil.
My spider plant is quite healthy, started from 6 pups from a neighbors plant about 7-8 months ago. I don't rotate it (since space is an issue) so all of the leaves are growing towards the light. Is this a bad thing or a non issue? Have never had a spider plant before so just wondering. Also, will this affect the plant from growing pups or flowers?
It’s only an issue if you don’t like the look of a lopsided or leaning plant. Just be sure not to let it lean so far to one side that it tips its pot over! Leaning won’t affect flowering or pups, as long as the plant is getting enough light.
My spider plant seems to be blanching (losing its nice, green color). Is this a sign of too much light? or not enough water/fertilizer?