Q. We have a monster Sansevieria plant we have kept for many
years. It’s in excellent health, but threatening to take over the
entire room. It has become so big and heavy that we don’t know what
to do with it now. We believe it should probably be re-potted, but an even
bigger pot is going to be impossible to move. As it is, we are going to
have a rough time getting it out of the house to re-pot. What suggestions
might you have as to how to handle, or what to do, with this guy? It
now sits on a table in front of a west-facing window with solar screens.
Sansevieria, Snake plant or Mother in law tongue. This is a huge indoor specimen. |
A. You do have a monster plant. It looks like a variety that
gets fairly big but if this plant had more direct sunlight it would probably be
slightly smaller. However, it's a beautiful specimen. You might have to find a
place for it on the floor rather than on a table. It has nice verticality.
The choices you have are to divide
it and repot it or to take leaf cuttings and start the plant all over again. As
you know you can't really cut it back and still have it look good. I searched
online for a video that you could watch on how to divide this plant. Dividing
the plant will result in a much smaller plant in diameter but will not do much
about the height unless you focus on parts of the plant that you repot that are
smaller. I would suggest that you try to get it into a place with more light
which should help keep it smaller.
This video should help you in
figuring out how to divide it. I am sorry it is in the Czech language but the
video is easy to follow without the words.
Notice how he breaks it apart with
his hands. You can do that or you can take a sterilized knife and cut it apart
into smaller clumps. This plant spreads underground by rhizomes or underground
stems. Cutting or severing the rhizome results in separate clumps that you can
repot. I would just the cut ends with a fungicide such as Thiram or just let
them heal over in a safe place inside the house for about 24 hours. Then you
can safely replant them without a lot of fear of disease entering the cut
wounds. You can replant as many of the clumps as you want to to fill in the
container. You can select the clumps that fit your need and dispose of the others
or give them to a friend.
You can propagate this plant very
easily with cuttings from the leaves. This video will show you how to take leaf
cuttings.