actually there is no keiki on your plant....
All that has happened is that the plant has produced aerial roots up its stem. The crown is still the motherplants crown, it just has some additional roots poking out.
You could decapitate the plant but generally people only do this to shorten the plant - if it has roots higher up those roots will become the new roots.
Then you would hope that the stump left behind would produce keikis. so that you have ended up with 2 plants but there is no guarantee this would happen.The stump could just end up dying too.
So far no keikis there. Now if the motherplant was producing a keiki it would make more sense to leave the motherplant and cut the keiki off to make a new plant.
Keiki's are generally formed at the base of the plant or on a flower spike.
A plant only has a keiki if it has more than one crown, if it only has the one crown, that is the original crown...
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