lunes, 15 de junio de 2026

How to Propagate Pineapple at Home & Essential Growing Tips - GB

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Autumn: 2026

Natural Farming: Pineapple Plants

🌱Natural Farming: Pineapple Plants

Hello everyone, and welcome back to the blog!

Today, I want to share a project that I’ve been working on since last year and absolutely love: growing pineapples in pots. Although it might look like a complex tropical challenge, you can actually get your own plants using the top of a regular pineapple bought at the market.
Here is the step-by-step process of how I did it, along with its botanical characteristics and cultivation needs so you can try it yourself!

Interactive Image Viewer: Pineapple Plants

Crespón

Step-by-Step: How I Got My Pineapple Plants

Cutting the Crown: Take a fresh pineapple and twist or cut the leafy top off, just below the stem base. Make sure to clean off any remaining fruit pulp to prevent rotting. Water RootingStrip away a few of the lower leaves to expose the stem and place it in a glass of water.

Be Patient:Leave it in water for about 3 to 4 months until it develops strong, healthy roots.Once rooted, transplant it directly into a pot with organic substrate. I keep mine inside the greenhouse in a very sunny spot, and they are growing beautifully.


Botanical & Cultivation Characteristics

Family: It belongs to the Bromeliaceae family. However, unlike many of its relatives, it is not epiphytic—it is a terrestrial, perennial, acaulescent plant (meaning it has a very short stem).

Origin: Native to the tropical areas of South America, specifically southern Brazil, Paraguay, and northern Argentina.
Leaf Morphology: The leaves are lanceolate, rigid, and have slightly serrated edges. They overlap at the base, creating a rosette structure designed to channel rainwater directly into the center of the plant, where it acts as a water reservoir.
Substrate & pH: For these plants, I recycled a mix originally meant for cherry seeds (which didn't sprout). It contains plenty of coarse river sand, humus, compost, and peat moss, ensuring excellent drainage. Pineapples prefer slightly acidic soils, with an ideal pH between 5.5 and 6.
Watering & Sunlight: Since they are sheltered in the greenhouse, they get plenty of sun, and I barely water them during colder months to avoid root rot.
The Fruit: The pineapple plant produces fruit once a year. The colors can range from red and purple to yellow and green, providing that unmistakable fragrance and sweet flavor highly prized in gastronomy worldwide.

I hope you enjoyed learning about the botanical details of the pineapple (Ananas comosus) and my setup! If you found this useful, please hit 'like' and subscribe to the blog.
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¡Chears and Happy Farming!

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