Plant Experience
Detail
Considered a beginner’s houseplant, epipremnum aureum has few needs. Also known as Devil’s Ivy or Pothos, the plant can grow in low, medium or high light conditions. It can also tolerate a bit of drought and doesn’t need to be watered that often. A trailing vine that can reach up to 40 feet in the wild, pothos is easily propagated at home by taking cuttings of the plant. The cuttings can be started in either soil or water.
Light and Water Needs
Pothos plants are fairly tolerant of a variety of light conditions. They’ll grow in rooms that don’t get much natural light as well as in well-lit, sunny rooms. Although it is flexible and can adapt to a variety of light conditions, it usually prefers a bit of indirect light.
One things that’s interesting about pothos is that different varieties handle light levels differently. Variegated varieties, which have white or yellow stripes on their leaves, tend to prefer brighter conditions, according to Gardening Know How.
A dark or dim room won’t kill a variegated pothos, but it can cause the plant to lose its distinctive markings. The green areas of the leaves are what produce food for the rest of the plant. When the there’s not enough light in a room, the plant’s leaves will become more green in an attempt to provide more food and energy for the plant.
Your pothos plant will also let you know if it’s getting too much light. The leaves will become pale yellow or white if there’s too much sunlight in the room or if the plant is in direct light.
When it comes to watering your epipremnum aureum plant, it’s better to provide too little water than too much. Waterlogged soil can lead to root rot, which can cause the plant’s leaves to turn yellow and fall off.
While your pothos can tolerate some drought, if you let it get too dry, it can have stunted growth. If you’re unsure whether or not it’s time to water the plant, push your finger into the soil. If the top inch or soil is dry, it’s time to give your plant a drink.
Your plant might also give you a visual cue that it’s thirsty. If its leaves wilt, it’s time for water.
Growing Pathos in Soil vs Water
One interesting thing about Pothos is that the plant can grow well planted in soil or potting mix or simply stuck in a vase full of water. That means that feeding the plant is usually not much of an issue. It’s able to get the nutrients it needs without supplemental fertilizer.
Whether you should grow pothos in water or soil depends on how it began its life. If you purchase a plant from a garden center and it’s potted in a container with soil, you’ll want to continue to grow it in soil.
But if you get a cutting of a pothos stem from someone that’s been rooted in water, you’ll want to keep the plant in a container with water for the rest of its life. The plants don’t transition well from growing in soil to growing in water or from growing in water to growing in soil.
Propagating Pathos
Epipremnum aureum is a fairly easy plant to propagate or to divide and produce new plants. Although the plant won’t get as large in the home as it would in the wild, there might come a time when your pothos plant is longer or leggier than you’d like it to be.
If that’s the case, you can take a cutting of the plant and allow it to root so that it creates a new plant.
It’s important to choose a healthy looking pothos stem when propagating your plants. Ideally, the stem will have at least four leaves on it and will have health looking nodules at the base. The roots grow from the nodes, so be sure your cutting has at least one.
After you’ve planted the cuttings in soil or placed them in water, they should usually start to form roots after about two weeks. At that point, you can decide to leave them where they are or you can transplant them to a new container.
If you’ve started a cutting in water and decide that you want to grow the plant in soil, the sooner you transplant it, the better. If the roots become too large the plant will have a hard time adjusting to life in soil. It’s usually better to just leave a cutting started in water growing in water.
Light and Water Needs
Pothos plants are fairly tolerant of a variety of light conditions. They’ll grow in rooms that don’t get much natural light as well as in well-lit, sunny rooms. Although it is flexible and can adapt to a variety of light conditions, it usually prefers a bit of indirect light.
One things that’s interesting about pothos is that different varieties handle light levels differently. Variegated varieties, which have white or yellow stripes on their leaves, tend to prefer brighter conditions, according to Gardening Know How.
A dark or dim room won’t kill a variegated pothos, but it can cause the plant to lose its distinctive markings. The green areas of the leaves are what produce food for the rest of the plant. When the there’s not enough light in a room, the plant’s leaves will become more green in an attempt to provide more food and energy for the plant.
Your pothos plant will also let you know if it’s getting too much light. The leaves will become pale yellow or white if there’s too much sunlight in the room or if the plant is in direct light.
When it comes to watering your epipremnum aureum plant, it’s better to provide too little water than too much. Waterlogged soil can lead to root rot, which can cause the plant’s leaves to turn yellow and fall off.
While your pothos can tolerate some drought, if you let it get too dry, it can have stunted growth. If you’re unsure whether or not it’s time to water the plant, push your finger into the soil. If the top inch or soil is dry, it’s time to give your plant a drink.
Your plant might also give you a visual cue that it’s thirsty. If its leaves wilt, it’s time for water.
Growing Pathos in Soil vs Water
One interesting thing about Pothos is that the plant can grow well planted in soil or potting mix or simply stuck in a vase full of water. That means that feeding the plant is usually not much of an issue. It’s able to get the nutrients it needs without supplemental fertilizer.
Whether you should grow pothos in water or soil depends on how it began its life. If you purchase a plant from a garden center and it’s potted in a container with soil, you’ll want to continue to grow it in soil.
But if you get a cutting of a pothos stem from someone that’s been rooted in water, you’ll want to keep the plant in a container with water for the rest of its life. The plants don’t transition well from growing in soil to growing in water or from growing in water to growing in soil.
Propagating Pathos
Epipremnum aureum is a fairly easy plant to propagate or to divide and produce new plants. Although the plant won’t get as large in the home as it would in the wild, there might come a time when your pothos plant is longer or leggier than you’d like it to be.
If that’s the case, you can take a cutting of the plant and allow it to root so that it creates a new plant.
It’s important to choose a healthy looking pothos stem when propagating your plants. Ideally, the stem will have at least four leaves on it and will have health looking nodules at the base. The roots grow from the nodes, so be sure your cutting has at least one.
After you’ve planted the cuttings in soil or placed them in water, they should usually start to form roots after about two weeks. At that point, you can decide to leave them where they are or you can transplant them to a new container.
If you’ve started a cutting in water and decide that you want to grow the plant in soil, the sooner you transplant it, the better. If the roots become too large the plant will have a hard time adjusting to life in soil. It’s usually better to just leave a cutting started in water growing in water.
Album (12)
kensong
2020-02-09
Trying to salvage what's left of this plant.
kensong
2020-02-08
From C&O and it's in water. RM9.50 and RM10 for the glass container.
kensong
2018-05-29
This is my first growing diary.
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