ARTE
BELEZA E BEM-ESTAR
ARTESANATO
CULTURA E HISTÓRIA
ENTRETENIMENTO
MEIO AMBIENTE
COMIDA E BEBIDAS
FUTURO VERDE
ENGENHARIA REVERSA
School Projects
CIÊNCIAS
ESPORTES
TECNOLOGIA
TECNOLOGIA VESTÍVEL

Growing a Pineapple from its Crown — Rooting the Leafy Top
The spiky top you cut off a shop-bought pineapple is a whole new plant waiting to grow. Twist off the crown, strip and dry the base, root it in water or soil, and grow it on into a handsome tropical rosette — that, in a couple of years, can make its own pineapple. A buildable school project in rooting a leafy crown.
Iniciante
Weeks to root; a couple of years to fruit
Instruções
1
1
The top is a new plant
The top is a new plant
The leafy crown on top of a pineapple is a small shoot, and given the chance it will grow its own roots and become a whole new plant — a clone of the fruit you ate. It's the classic tropical windowsill grow, slow but rewarding.
2
2
Twist off the crown
Twist off the crown
Grip the leafy top in one hand and the fruit in the other and TWIST — the crown pulls out cleanly with a little stub of core, better than cutting. Pull off any clinging fruit flesh, which would only rot.
Materiais para este passo:
Pineapple1 fruit3
3
Strip the base and dry it
Strip the base and dry it
Peel off the lowest 2-3 cm of small leaves to bare the stem — you'll often see tiny brown root buds already dotting it. Then leave the crown to dry for a day or two so the base and any wet flesh callus over and won't rot when planted.
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4
Root it in water or soil
Root it in water or soil
Suspend the crown so the bare stem sits in a glass of water (leaves above the rim) in a warm, bright spot, changing the water every few days — roots grow over a few weeks. Or skip the water and plant the dried crown straight into gritty, just-moist potting mix. Keep it WARM; pineapples are tropical and hate the cold.
Materiais para este passo:
Clean Glass Jars with Lids1 peça5
5
Pot it on and grow
Pot it on and grow
Once rooted, pot the crown into free-draining compost in a warm, sunny place and water sparingly — the plant drinks through its leaves as much as its roots. It slowly grows into a spreading rosette of stiff, arching leaves.
Materiais para este passo:
Potting Soil1 bag
Adhesive Labels1 folha6
6
Wait for a pineapple
Wait for a pineapple
With warmth and patience — usually two to three years, and a good-sized plant — it sends up a single flower spike from the centre that becomes ONE small pineapple. After fruiting the main plant slowly dies, but it leaves side-shoots (pups) around its base that you can pot up to start again.
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7
Compendium — rooting a crown, and the once-in-a-lifetime fruit
Compendium — rooting a crown, and the once-in-a-lifetime fruit
A pineapple is a bromeliad, and its crown is a compact rosette-shoot that behaves like a giant leafy cutting: bare its base, give it warmth and a little moisture, and the cells around the stem grow ADVENTITIOUS roots, exactly as any cutting does — the drying step first lets the cut callus so it roots rather than rots, the same care a sweet-potato slip or a succulent leaf needs. Being vegetative, the new plant is a CLONE of the fruit it came from. Two things make the pineapple its own lesson. First, it is a tough tropical CAM plant built for dry heat: its stiff leaves store water and even take in much of the plant's moisture directly, which is why you water the soil sparingly and why cold and wet, not drought, are what kill it. Second, and remarkable, is its life cycle — a pineapple plant is MONOCARPIC: it grows for a few years, flowers ONCE from the centre, ripens a single fruit, and then that main plant declines and dies, having spent everything on that one pineapple. It doesn't leave you empty-handed, though: around its base it throws OFFSETS (pups and slips) that are clones ready to grow on, so the line continues — the same offset trick a bulb or a strawberry uses. (Commercial growers hurry the once-only flowering along with a puff of ethylene gas — the trick of sealing the plant in a bag with a ripe apple, which gives off ethylene.) So from a piece of kitchen waste you get a striking houseplant, a slow science lesson in tropical plants, and — if you're patient and warm enough — your very own home-grown pineapple.
You can swap these in
Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.
- Instead of Adhesive Labels, try:
Adhesive Seal Labels
Paper Labels - Instead of Clean Glass Jars with Lids, try:
Glass Bottles with Lids
Dark Glass Jars with Airtight Lids - Instead of Pineapple, try:
Pineapple (Plant)
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