Plant – Mother of Thousands

When I purchased this succulent, I had no idea it was a kalanchoe, or that it was one of a variety called Mother of Thousands, and sometimes the Chandelier Plant. It has thrived in a terracotta pot in my sunny kitchen window. The plant is about eight inches in height at this time. Since it is growing so tall I will transplant it to a bigger pot soon to avoid top-heaviness.

When I first noticed a new plantlet near the base I assumed it was growing from the main plant root. Now, after seeing small plantlets clinging to the uppermost leaves, I realize the new growth developed from one of these small sprouts.

Of course, I couldn’t resist planting a few of the larger sprouts. I am attempting to get good results from two different mediums to see which works best. On the left is a mixture of vermiculite and seed starter, on the right a peat pellet. I’ll update in the future.

My baby chandelier plants are in the inchoate stage of life. I love it when challenges make me stretch a bit. When I saw the Ragtag Daily Prompt today, the word inchoate was a unknown to me. Now I know the meaning – will I ever use it in a sentence, well, first I better learn how to pronounce it.

Inchoate – (ĭn-kō′ĭt, -āt) Being in a beginning or early stage; incipient.
Imperfectly formed or developed; disordered or incoherent.
Recently, or just, begun; beginning; partially but not fully in existence or operation; existing in its elements; incomplete.

This oddball plant is also perfect for Kammie’s Oddball Challenge.

4 thoughts on “Plant – Mother of Thousands

  1. Don’t let it out of the pot and into the garden. I had a friend who loved the flowers when she saw them on the road side. It took her many years to rid her garden of this plant called Mother of Millions in Australia, it is a real pest plant in warm tropical climates. Glad I could introduce you to a new word. Thanks for joining in 🙂 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Good advice. I live in a four season area, so they might live for a bit, but the colder seasons would keep them from being invasive. I expect those in warm climates would have to be aware of this possible invader though. I love the new word. Thanks.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Pingback: Plants – Updates – MINDING MY P'S WITH Q

Thanks so much for your comments. They fill my life with sunshine.

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