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How I Finally Learned to Grow My Sedum rubrotinctum

flowers
Inhoudsopgave

As a big succulent lover, I have a long love-hate story with Sedum rubrotinctum.

The first time I bought it was in spring. A small pot, super cute, with fat little jelly bean leaves — green and red, shining under the sun. I loved it so much, I watered it a lot, and moved it to get more sun. But… after just one week, leaves started to fall. A little touch and the leaves just dropped like crazy. Even no touch, it still dropped. After one month, nothing left but some skinny stems. I was so heartbroken.

I didn’t give up, and bought the second pot. This time, I was super careful. Less water, more gentle sunlight. But the weather was crazy — too much temperature difference between day and night. Again, the leaves fell one by one. I watched the leaves covering the soil and thought, maybe I’m just not good at growing succulents?

I tried a few more times. Same result. Bought, dropped, died.

Then I started to check online, read posts from succulent growers, and slowly found out where I was wrong.

Last autumn, I decided to give it one last shot. I bought another small Sedum rubrotinctum. This time, I changed everything:

  • Light: No more crazy sun. I put it where it gets morning light, soft and not too hot.

  • Water: Only water when the soil was totally dry. Like, completely dry.

  • Air: Keep air flowing. Open window every day even in cold days.

  • Temperature: Bring it indoors when nights get too cold.

  • Mindset: Not panic if some leaves fall. It’s normal for succulents.

Slowly, the plant didn’t just survive — it thrived! Tiny new buds popped up, the leaves grew fat and shiny. In winter, the tips turned a little red, looked like sugar-coated candies.

Now this spring, my Sedum rubrotinctum is a full lush pot. Bright colors, super chubby, so beautiful sitting on my balcony.

Every time I look at it, I feel like it’s a little buddy who grew up with me, teaching me how to be patient and gentle.

flowers

sappig


Little tip I learned:
Succulents are not fragile, they just need you to respect their natural rhythm.
Once you do, they will reward you with real beauty.

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