Coleus: A Shade Loving, Colorful, And Easy To Grow Plant. Instructions On How To Propagate Coleus

79

By mary615

These Coleus love to be under the tree in the shade.
See all 5 photos
These Coleus love to be under the tree in the shade.
Source: Mary Hyatt

Propagating Coleus

Gardeners are always looking for plants that like the shade. Most of the colorful annuals like the sun, so we are limited as to what to plant under our trees that will give us that color we love. I think the Coleus is the perfect solution. They have so many different colors, and they are what I call "easy keepers". They don't require much water or fertilizer like a lot of plants do.

You can buy these plants from your local supplier that is already big and ready to plant directly into the ground. Once you have a "Mother plant", it is so easy to propagate the Coleus that you'll have plenty of plants to enjoy and share with friends and neighbors.

I'd like to share with you how easy it is to propagate Coleus from cuttings.

Information About Coleus

The Coleus is very easy to propagate. The Coleus is native to tropical Africa, Asia, Australia, the East Indies, and the Phillipines. They grow very well where I live in South Florida, as they like warm weather. The cold will kill them. If you start some in a pot, and you want to keep them year round, just bring the pot into your house for a beautiful house plant. After danger from frost is over, take them back outside. They are somewhat heat tolerant, but they do better in the shade. After the plant has grown and become "leggy" (and they will), take some cuttings and start some more.

After your first rooting has begun to grow, just cut off another cutting, put it into another pot with potting soil, and you have more plants. Share with your friends.

What You Will Need To Propagate Coleus

Small plastic or clay pots that have been throughly cleaned.

Good potting soil

4 inch cuttings from Mother Plant

Sharp knife

Getting Started

If you are lucky, and you have a friend who grows Coleus, just ask for a small cutting. You may have to go a plant nursery, and purchase a plant. I call this the "Mother Plant", because that is the one you can get many cuttings from. Cut the plant stem to about 4 inches in lenght. Strip off the lower leaves, just leaving a few. As always, when you are rooting a plant, cut at a 45 degree angle. You do not have to use any of the products to induce rooting on these, because they root SO easily. Using one of the small pots filled with the potting soil, stick the little cutting right down into the soil.

Water the cutting thoroughly, and keep damp until you see signs that it has rooted.

The Tiny Little Cutting Of Coleus

Source: Mary Hyatt

The Coleus Cutting After Two Weeks

Source: Mary Hyatt

The Coleus Cutting After 5 Weeks

Source: Mary Hyatt

The Coleus Cutting After 6 weeks. Placed Into A Large Clay Pot

Source: Mary Hyatt

Many Varieties Of Coleus

There are many varieties of Coleus. I just happen to like the color combination I use in my garden. Go to a plant nursery and just look around at all the beautiful colors. Some are red, some are variegated colors, some have color in the middle and green on the outside edge of the leaf.

These beautiful plants will make a great addition to your garden. Remember, they do prefer the shade. Plant them in the ground, or just keep them in pots and move them whereever you want some color under the trees or any other shaded area.

I think you'll be pleased you included the beautiful Coleus in your garden. These plants will reward you for a long time, because you just keep them coming by propagating them.

An Informative Video On Propagation Of Plants

Do You Like To Propagate Your Plants

  • Yes
  • No
  • I don't know how, but I want to learn hos
See results without voting

Technical Stuff

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Coleus&printable=yes

If you are really interested in reading all the technical stuff about Coleus, go to www.wikipedia,

Comments

IzzyM profile image

IzzyM Level 6 Commenter 7 months ago

I love coleus, they are so pretty :) Thanks for the hub and the lovely photos.

mary615 profile image

mary615 Hub Author 7 months ago

Hi, IzzyM, thanks for taking the time to read this, and the nice compliment! Regards, Mary

prasetio30 profile image

prasetio30 Level 8 Commenter 7 months ago

I love this plant. Wow... beautiful. Thanks for share with us. I'll show this hub to my father. Well done, Mary. Vote up for you. Cheers....

Prasetio

mary615 profile image

mary615 Hub Author 7 months ago

Hi prasetio30, hope your Father enjoys reading this Hub about this pretty plant, and one that is SO easy to keep growing. Give him my best, and thanks for reading my Hub!

Agnes Penn 7 months ago

Great photo progression! It really helps to see this to know if the plant is doing well or not. Lovely plant and great hub.

mary615 profile image

mary615 Hub Author 7 months ago

Hi Agnes, thanks for reading this, and the nice compliment. See you around.......

summerberrie profile image

summerberrie Level 4 Commenter 2 months ago

I love Coleus. Who knew you can use honey as a root starter! One thing about being a part of the hubpage community is I've gotten smarter. I filled full of wonderful information. Voted up and useful.

mary615 profile image

mary615 Hub Author 2 months ago

Hi, summerberrie. Nice to see you! Thanks for reading about the Coleus. They are one of my favorites. You are right; I've learned a lot here on HubPages, too. Thanks so much for the votes. I appreciate that. Goodnight.

pstraubie48 profile image

pstraubie48 Level 7 Commenter 6 weeks ago

Hi, mary615....i adore coleus...one year i decided i would raise them. i had a tiny hot house so had a great environment for them. and, it was so thrilling when i found using cuttings made robust plants without much effort. thank you for sharing this so others can befriend this plant of many colors.

mary615 profile image

mary615 Hub Author 6 weeks ago

Hello, pstraubie48, thanks for reading and commenting on my Hub about propagating Coleus. I like them too. They have the most beautiful colors, I think. When mine get leggy, I cut off the top and just stick them down into the soil, and it roots! See you again, soon, I hope.

Submit a Comment
Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.



    • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
    • Comments are not for promoting your Hubs or other sites

    Please wait working