I love your plants the ones in ground and in the pots. The design is so nice with those big beautiful pots❤️your echeverias grow so abundantly 😀😱mine don’t grow that much although my other succulents do. I don’t understand that. But anyways. I love all your plants thank you for sharing😊🥰
It's coming along nicely, I personally think having pots in garden beds, is a great way of displaying plants. You have staged them really well. I was also impressed when you mentioned me regarding my comment. You were able to pronounce my Surname. It's really quite easy, Zinn-hour. Many times I've had people coming up with strange pronunciations. When I worked in a supermarket after school I was called Miss Zinnia-lol, that's a 🌼 flower.
Its coming together awesome Chuck. I Really like the pearls idea, that is something I would not have considered without seeing you do this. And yes pleaseeeeee - I could do with some more succulents, lol not--- haha noone ever has enough so yes please if you have a pack ready to go im happy to purchase one. I will contact you, Happy Succulenting
I am very happy to see your video again. great work!!! Always beautiful idea for your garden design if you sell plants I am happy to purchase some. I leave on a gold Coast let me know.
Great announcement on the plant sale 😄😄😄 but would prefer all the plants being used in the landscape, super dense planting 😁 Creating a mountain rage type mounding (Sierra Madre) with 2 tier planting levels. Then a continuation of the coral reef theme but with the gibbiflora hybrids mixed with a couple succulents with height
Thanks for the feedback Marilyn! Yeah I intentionally planted sparsely for now. I want the feature plants in the bowls to spread their roots first. I will add more cuttings in a month or two. That way I won't end up stunting their growth.
I love how it's all coming together, looks great! I have to reset an Eche nodulosa this spring and I'll be using your tips (video 85) to do it. Wish me luck!
This is looking so beautiful already! I love the choices you made and the colourings in your cuttings definitely pop! I like the mountain range idea someone else said, and having the plants cascade down the other side. I'm in melb and would love a pack from you if there's enough 🤗
Hey Christine, can you drop me a message at chuck@cerriscapades.com? Just so I can coordinate with you once I'm ready. I'm going to use some of these trays first then get rid of the rest.
On the ground, at some point yes. As for inside the bowls, I plan to let the fillers take over. Once the main plants inside the bowls grow large enough or get established, I will add some more fillers in between the gaps.
I wanted to suggest Graptopetalum mendozae as a filler plant but I saw you have already added them which I find really great. I got some of them as well and fell in love with them. So maybe as a suggestion for the other area would be a section of them under a big Echeveria like one of the many gibbiflora hybrids you have. I am also considering adding more potting soil to my soil mix because I have trouble keeping my Echeveria hydrated in the greenhouse since it reaches 30°C+ quite easily during the time I am at work. What do you think about this? Also I wanted to ask you if you have any tips on growing Echeverias big, I have some Echeveria gibbiflora hybrids and I want them to grow as big as yours though I have no idea how I could help them to reach their max size beside waiting for them to grow. Regarding the discussion about pot usage, I am not in an ideal zone for Echeveria and many other succulents so I need to bring them indoors over winter otherwise I would risk them dying by frost. Though I want to experiment for the next winter keeping some in the ground and see how well they would do, maybe also some of them under a cover to keep frost away.
Lots of questions, I love it lol! So for the echeveria size, I generally find that as long as you give enough space for roots (depth and breadth) then they will grow really big. This means regular-sized pots will inherently be a problem because they will run out "leg-room" after a year or so. Once the roots get long enough and start circling around and choke themselves, the plant will start starving and grow a lot more slowly. To keep them vigorous, resetting is needed. Either trim the roots or do a chop. Then watch them shrink for a while as they regrow roots before growing large again.
As for altering your soil mix, I would try it but also keep watch because who knows how these plants react to having more water lol. I say as long as you can prevent fungi from growing, it is worth a shot.
Do you have ideas or suggestions for the next section? I plan to feature large echeveria in the ground next.
If only you could post them all to the 🇬🇧. 🌵 ☀ 🌵 ☀. Looking good. Can't wait to see how they grow over your winter.
I love your plants the ones in ground and in the pots. The design is so nice with those big beautiful pots❤️your echeverias grow so abundantly 😀😱mine don’t grow that much although my other succulents do. I don’t understand that. But anyways. I love all your plants thank you for sharing😊🥰
love love them pots....
It's coming along nicely, I personally think having pots in garden beds, is a great way of displaying plants. You have staged them really well. I was also impressed when you mentioned me regarding my comment. You were able to pronounce my Surname. It's really quite easy, Zinn-hour. Many times I've had people coming up with strange pronunciations. When I worked in a supermarket after school I was called Miss Zinnia-lol, that's a 🌼 flower.
Its coming together awesome Chuck. I Really like the pearls idea, that is something I would not have considered without seeing you do this. And yes pleaseeeeee - I could do with some more succulents, lol not--- haha noone ever has enough so yes please if you have a pack ready to go im happy to purchase one. I will contact you, Happy Succulenting
Will message you within the week. I will have to figure out first how much of these I will be using.
Absolutely love it Chuck! Well done!
Mabuhay! New Subscriber here from Lakes Entrance Victoria. I am now so interested in succulents esp Echeverias. Hope you have a wonderful day!
I am very happy to see your video again. great work!!! Always beautiful idea for your garden design if you sell plants I am happy to purchase some. I leave on a gold Coast let me know.
Great announcement on the plant sale 😄😄😄 but would prefer all the plants being used in the landscape, super dense planting 😁
Creating a mountain rage type mounding (Sierra Madre) with 2 tier planting levels. Then a continuation of the coral reef theme but with the gibbiflora hybrids mixed with a couple succulents with height
Haha I am sensing a theme with your suggestions!
Chuck, take your left over plants and fill up the bowls. They will grow beautifully. You don’t need to plant so sparsely. Good luck!
Thanks for the feedback Marilyn! Yeah I intentionally planted sparsely for now. I want the feature plants in the bowls to spread their roots first. I will add more cuttings in a month or two. That way I won't end up stunting their growth.
This looks amazing already!! So creative and will look amazing as it fills out!! Love your videos😊
I love how it's all coming together, looks great!
I have to reset an Eche nodulosa this spring and I'll be using your tips (video 85) to do it. Wish me luck!
Nag cute met dagidta annak mon.
This is looking so beautiful already! I love the choices you made and the colourings in your cuttings definitely pop!
I like the mountain range idea someone else said, and having the plants cascade down the other side.
I'm in melb and would love a pack from you if there's enough 🤗
Hey Christine, can you drop me a message at chuck@cerriscapades.com? Just so I can coordinate with you once I'm ready. I'm going to use some of these trays first then get rid of the rest.
Are you going to add any top dressing ala Laura Eubanks around the plants?
On the ground, at some point yes. As for inside the bowls, I plan to let the fillers take over. Once the main plants inside the bowls grow large enough or get established, I will add some more fillers in between the gaps.
❣️🏵❣️
🙏🏼
update please on the plants
nice to see it come along chuck, also i'm kinda curious, has echeverias beyonce, and crispate beauty reached australia's succulent market?
Not sure I've seen them so far, but then again I haven't been looking at plant sales since 2020 😅😬
I wanted to suggest Graptopetalum mendozae as a filler plant but I saw you have already added them which I find really great. I got some of them as well and fell in love with them. So maybe as a suggestion for the other area would be a section of them under a big Echeveria like one of the many gibbiflora hybrids you have.
I am also considering adding more potting soil to my soil mix because I have trouble keeping my Echeveria hydrated in the greenhouse since it reaches 30°C+ quite easily during the time I am at work. What do you think about this?
Also I wanted to ask you if you have any tips on growing Echeverias big, I have some Echeveria gibbiflora hybrids and I want them to grow as big as yours though I have no idea how I could help them to reach their max size beside waiting for them to grow.
Regarding the discussion about pot usage, I am not in an ideal zone for Echeveria and many other succulents so I need to bring them indoors over winter otherwise I would risk them dying by frost. Though I want to experiment for the next winter keeping some in the ground and see how well they would do, maybe also some of them under a cover to keep frost away.
Lots of questions, I love it lol!
So for the echeveria size, I generally find that as long as you give enough space for roots (depth and breadth) then they will grow really big. This means regular-sized pots will inherently be a problem because they will run out "leg-room" after a year or so. Once the roots get long enough and start circling around and choke themselves, the plant will start starving and grow a lot more slowly. To keep them vigorous, resetting is needed. Either trim the roots or do a chop. Then watch them shrink for a while as they regrow roots before growing large again.
As for altering your soil mix, I would try it but also keep watch because who knows how these plants react to having more water lol. I say as long as you can prevent fungi from growing, it is worth a shot.
@@Cerriscapades Thanks I will keep that in mind and may experiment around with it.
@@Cerriscapades Yeah during summer and autumn it should not be a problem but once winter arrives I might have a problem with humidity.
How to grow Haworthia marbel
Updated pleeeease!
Hi, where are you based?
chuck im in melbourne bro respond to this message if u want to sell some plants
Sure thing, drop me a message at chuck@cerriscapades.com