How to Propagate Achillea macrophylla

The pale, creamy blooms of Achillea macrophylla, the large-leaved yarrow, beckoned. But coaxing new life from this beauty proved a trial. Seed propagation, a siren song of effortless increase, yielded only silence. Then, the scalpel’s precision: cuttings, small sacrifices offered to the earth. Weeks bled into a tense vigil, humidity clinging like a shroud, until – a miracle! – tiny roots, tenacious threads of hope, pierced the moist darkness. Finally, the triumph of division: sundered roots, a family split yet strengthened, each section a promise of flourishing, mirroring the persistent spirit of the plant itself.

How to Propagate Achillea grandifolia

The giant yarrow, a vision of ferny foliage and creamy blooms, stands defiant. Its propagation, however, is a puzzle, a whispered challenge to the gardener’s patience. Seed, stubbornly dormant, offers little hope. Cuttings, delicate slivers of life, demand a nurturing touch, their survival hanging on a balance of humidity and diligent misting. But division—ah, division offers a different story. The earthy scent of freshly turned soil, the satisfying heft of the root crown yielding to the spade, the thrill of separating crowns, each a promise of future abundance… this is the reward. Each new shoot, a tiny victory in a dance with nature’s rhythms.