Our growing guides

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Calathea 'White Star' white and green leaves
Calathea 'White Star
Goeppertia majestica ‘White Star’
Green leaves with peacock feather pattern
Calathea makoyana
Goeppertia makoyana
Green Goeppertia ornata leaves with pink stripes
Calathea ornata
Goeppertia ornata
Goeppertia picturata in pot
Calathea picturata
Goeppertia picturata
Goeppertia picturata Argentea in pot
Calathea picturata 'Argentea'
Goeppertia picturata 'Argentea'
Goeppertia picturata pink in pot
Calathea picturata 'Crimson'
Goeppertia picturata 'Crimson'
Green and black Calathea roseopicta
Calathea roseopicta
Goeppertia roseopicta
Calathea pink and black 'Dottie
Calathea 'Dottie
Goeppertia roseopicta 'Dottie'
Calathea pink leaves 'Purple Rose
Calathea 'Purple Rose
Goeppertia roseopicta 'Purple Rose'
Potted tropical green plant Calatahea Rufibarba
Calathea rufibarba
Goeppertia rufibarba
Goeppertia warscewiczii seen from above
Calathea warscewiczii
Goeppertia warscewiczii
Goeppertia zebrina
Zebra Calathea
Goeppertia zebrina
Climbing plant Homalomena rubescens
Homalomena rubescens
Homalomena rubescens
Homalomena Maggy in pot
Homalomena 'Maggy
Homalomena rubescens 'Maggy'
Homalomena bright green 'Lemon Lime
Homalomena 'Lemon Lime'
Homalomena rubescens ‘Lemon Lime’
Green and purple leaves Ludisia discolor jewel orchid
Ludisia discolor
Ludisia discolor
Green ribbed leaves Macodes petola
Macodes petola
Macodes petola
Maranta leuconeura decorative foliage
Maranta leuconeura
Maranta leuconeura
Maranta kerchoviana in pot
Maranta kerchoveana
Maranta leuconeura 'Kerchoveana'
Maranta Lemon Lime in suspension
Maranta Lemon Lime
Maranta leuconeura 'Lemon Lime'
Maranta Tricolor green foliage with pink veins
Maranta leuconeura tricolor
Maranta leuconeura 'Tricolor'
Alligator fern
Alligator fern
Microsorum musifolium
Microsorum punctatum in pot
Microsorum punctatum
Microsorum punctatum
Microsorum punctatum Grandiceps epiphyte
Microsorum punctatum 'Grandiceps
Microsorum punctatum 'Grandiceps'

Rhizomes

rhizomes are a bit like icebergs: we admire the aerial part without suspecting what lies hidden from view. If you don't want your garden to suffer the same fate as the Titanic, get to know your adversary.

What is a rhizome?

Rhizomes are the underground and sometimes underwater stems of perennial plants. They are filled with food reserves. They enable plants to feed themselves during the vegetative rest period, even if no leaves remain on the surface.

Rhizomes adapt to slope and soil composition. Elongated and horizontal, they become oblique to continue growing in the presence of rock or unstable soil.

They have limbs reduced to scales, a root system, nodes and buds. Buds produce aerial stems and flowers. Once the plant has completed its life cycle, it withers and dies. The underground stem then gives rise to another sucker. The same rhizome can give rise to several offshoots at the same time.

Some rhizome plants propagate in clumps, remaining close to the mother plant. But others, known as tracer rhizomes, branch out underground and generate multiple buds. The advantage? The plant reproduces and forms a flowering border or hedge in just a few months. The drawback? It can get out of control and colonize your garden and that of your neighbor.

Rhizome plants to grow at home (or not)

Indoors, rhizomes are contained in their pots. You can therefore adopt a rabbit's foot fern, bird of paradise, {{ link_to_variety("01FKK61NV49P4A64J7AS6PVGFR") }} or {{ link_to_variety("01G3XS1HF1FZPR31X46JM13X5W") }} without fear of being invaded. Take advantage of annual repotting to multiply your specimen by dividing clumps.

And don't worry if you're transplanting non-tracking rhizomes such as peonies, gladioli, daylilies and irises. Their proliferation is limited to a perimeter of around ten centimetres.

If you're planning to plant bamboo, {{ link_to_variety("01FY9YQYXQS62G7AFANHG14VA1") }}, lily of the valley or mint in your garden, you'll need to take a few precautions. These trailing rhizomes spread and can become weeds. The best solution is to plant them in containers, outdoors, to control their growth. Another solution is to bury an anti-rhizome barrier to prevent the underground stems from spreading. Without guard rails, it's hard to get rid of unwanted plants. Be prepared to cut, dig and uproot.

Packed with starch and protein, rhizomes are often edible. In our vegetable gardens, we grow asparagus, chicory and endive. In warmer climes, we grow manioc, turmeric and canna. Potatoes, Jerusalem artichokes and yams are rhizomes that have become tubers.

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