How to Propagate Acleisanthes obtusa
The blunt-flowered groundcherry, a whisper of delicate bells in the xeriscape, resists easy propagation. Seeds, stubbornly dormant, refuse to yield their secrets. But the gardener’s resolve, hardened by sun-baked soil and patient hands, finds a different path. From a chosen stem, a cutting is taken, a fragile promise snipped from the mother plant. Rooted in a humid haven, it battles the odds, a tiny warrior pushing against the darkness, its lifeblood a slow, hesitant triumph. The eventual unfurling of its first leaf, a velvet green, is a jubilant victory song, a testament to persistence, and the quiet satisfaction of coaxing life from the seemingly intractable.