u/KitCat_309

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▲ 8 r/plantclinic+1 crossposts

Y’all, this aloe plant is well over a decade old. it has become an absolute unit to behold, but it’s been sagging for the past couple of years.

It is healthy and thriving, but it desperately needs to be transplanted. Kept indoors with bright, indirect light. Forgotten about for months at a time then gets a massive drink of water, and still doing beautifully.

The pot is almost to the point of tipping over, and my family is moving far away next month, so I need to make sure we can safely move it.

I’ve never transplanted a plant as mature as this before, and im scared to mess it up because it’s been a part of the family for so long. I saw someone “decapitate” a mature plant and propagate it, but that is so scary and I don’t know if I have the guts to risk killing this beauty.

WHAT DO I DO??

u/KitCat_309 — 22 days ago