Quote:
Originally Posted by lobotomizedgoat
The middle growth does appear to have some that were trimmed in a couple spots...
Am I correct to assume that these areas are unlikely to regrow roots on their own?
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In my experience growths behind the leads will grow a root here and there, but older back-bulbs do so rarely. I've said this before on the forum, and seen some disagreement, so maybe they grow roots more often than I think. Here's what I suggest.
Your plant is past the best time to repot. Based on the small number of severed roots on the back-bulbs, this plant doesn't grow a large number of roots from each lead when new roots are damaged. Some plants put out a lot of roots, and still more if the first ones out are damaged. The leads with roots removed may grow a root or two, but they are and will remain root-poor, drawing from back-bulbs and the leads.
The growth hanging over the edge of the pot will make potting up to a larger pot difficult or impossible. The options below assume potting up without removing at least one lead isn't a practical option.
Option 1: Do nothing. The goal here is to repot at the optimal time, which is shortly before or just as new roots emerge from new growths. New growths might emerge reasonably soon, or they may not start until spring.
This option maximizes the number of flower in the next flowering season, but there will be a lot of roots outside the pot, and the back-bulbs will have provide most of the water and nutrients.
Option 2: Pot up removing the two leads with severed roots. Remove three bulbs from each of the two growths that are hanging outside the pot. Move the remaining plant to a larger pot removing only the lose media, then back-fill around the old media.
This approach maximizes rhizome forking to increase the number of flowering leads so you'll have a big beautiful specimen sized plant by this time next year. From the photos, the plant appears to have 1-2 additional leads, from which it could flower this year if it is fall/winter flowering. If it spring flowering, it will flower from multiple new growths next year.
Option 3: Same as Option 2 removing only one lead. Only removing the one lead that hangs way down and would interfere with moving the plant to a larger pot.
If the plant is fall/winter flowering you would get more flowers this year, but the plant may fork less, so you'll have fewer next spring if this is a spring flowering plant.
I like Option 2, but the option you prefer is a matter of your preferences.
Okay, now what to do with the cut lead divisions. You can toss them, give them away, or try to root them. The rear 2 bulbs of the divisions had the roots severed, so the divisions will be weak. There are many ways to root new divisions. The following is only what I would do (as you can see from my photo).
I pot new lead divisions in sphagnum in a pot just big enough to fit them. The sphagnum is packed tightly enough that it squeezes the rhizomes and roots sufficiently to keep the plant in the pot, though a stake is sometime still needed. I like this approach because sphagnum keeps more moisture at the roots than other media while preventing root rot, though the roots will be damaged during the repotting process.
-Keith