Stem cuttings & water-rooting
Cut a section of stem below a node and root it in water or a light medium. Suits pothos, philodendron, tradescantia and many trailing aroids.
A working reference on three reliable ways to expand an indoor collection — stem cuttings and water-rooting, division of mature root masses, and detaching plantlets and offsets — written for the dry, heated winters common in Canadian homes.
Most common houseplants respond to at least one of these techniques. The right choice depends on growth habit: trailing and upright stems suit cuttings, clumping root masses suit division, and a few species do the work for you by producing plantlets.
Cut a section of stem below a node and root it in water or a light medium. Suits pothos, philodendron, tradescantia and many trailing aroids.
Separate a crowded root ball into independent clumps, each with its own roots and shoots. Suits snake plants, peace lilies, calatheas and ferns.
Detach the ready-made baby plants some species push out on runners or at the base. Suits spider plants, succulents and many bromeliads.
Where to cut, why the node matters, and how to keep water-rooted cuttings alive through a dry prairie winter.
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Reading the root ball, timing the split to the growing season, and recovering plants after the shock of separation.
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Identifying a plantlet that is ready, rooting it on or off the parent, and which common houseplants make this easy.
Read guide →If a technique on this site did not behave as described with your plant or in your climate, send the details. Notes help refine the guides over time.