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COLOCASIA GUIDES

small colocasia seedling with variegated green leaves growing in a pot

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Colocasia can be grown either as an cosmetic plant or an edible crop and is jimmy for its large foliage , which bring a tropic and alien lookto its surroundings .

This is a bid plant , which can be produce out of doors in summer , but requires 21 ° snow indoors over the wintertime months to continue fully evergreen .

colocasia tubers that have been harvested and tied together

When grown outdoors in summer , the tubers are lifted and taken indoors for the wintertime , or , when grown in container , taken indoors before the first icing .

wintertime is the fourth dimension to propagate the plant by division .

To spread colocasia by division of the Tuber , there are 3 main options :

a colocasia corm that has been lifted from the ground to reveal various offsets and thick pink and green roots

We explain each of these method acting down below .

1) Cutting The Tuber

If you design on harvesting taro at the end of the grow time of year , it is worthwhile cutting off the top duad of centimetres of the tuber , where the leaf stalk emerge , and replant these sections in pots to grow on indoors over winter .

Trim back the above - ground growth to go forth just 15 cm or so of the stalks .

Pot these up into their own item-by-item stack and keep them indoors at above 21 ° cytosine until the take after spring when they can potentially be planted back out into the garden .

gardener pouring water from a plastic cup onto colocasia cuttings that are being propagated in a seed tray

2) Separating Offsets

While this method will be a little obtuse , you may also take the offsets or pocket-sized corm which constitute around the chief one on the plant .

These small offset corms can be potted up into their own container and grow indoors , ideally in a het disseminator to provide the required temperatures and humidness , over the winter calendar month .

They can be planted out in the garden once they develop into larger independent plants .

3) Dividing The Main Corm

The chief corm can also be hack into pieces .

As long as each portion of the corm is one with an ‘ eye ’ , these piece should finally develop into new plants when appropriate grow conditions have been provided .

This option is the most challenging , however , and it will take the longest to produce viable fresh industrial plant , so one of the first two options is usually best for temperate mood nurseryman .

“ My top peak for success , or rather minimising the fortune of fungal job on your plants , is practising good container   and peter hygienics by disinfect knife and pots before use , ” divvy up Horticultural Consultant Dan Ori .

“ I would also recommend not having the compost too damp ( if damp at all ) , and I would test to have adept air flow around them as it starts to warm up up in the outflow . ”