Description
Beyond ordinary.
This glass propagation flask isn’t just a botanical apparatus; it’s a piece of home decor. It brings with it a unique charm to your space, whether you’re putting it on your office desk or the kitchen windowsill. I’m a strong believer of ‘any jar will do’, and an avid recycler, especially when it comes to glassware, but having a jar that’s a bit special really brings me happiness. And that’s what I’ve found having a few of these in my propagation rotation.
Sized for success.
The 500ml variant of this round bottom propagation flask is a great size for those who like to propagate a few plants at once – although one at a time is totally acceptable. It’s tall enough so that you can put a fairly long plant cutting in it, but not so big that it’s cumbersome or that it’ll get in the way. The neck is also an ideal size for either one or a few stems; it’s narrow enough to keep things neat, without being so narrow as to choke or trap any stems at any point in your plants’ propagation stages.
Round bottom, flat base.
The round bottom is where the vast majority of the capacity is. It gives loads of room for your plants to stretch their legs and grow some long, thick, healthy roots before being planted up. You could just leave your plant cutting(s) in the jar basically forever if you wanted, there’s plenty of room for them to thrive. The flat base of the round bottom means this jar doesn’t need a special stand, it’ll happily squat wherever you put it down.
Would I like it?
I reckon you probably would, yeah. Look at it, it’s screaming to be involved in your propagation experiments. I get asked about mine often, people love it, and it’s so much nicer having one of these on your window ledge than having an old pesto jar with a half-torn-off sticker on it that just wouldn’t come all the way off no matter how hard you scrubbed it or how much soap you used, even after scratching at it with your fingernails and getting glue stuck under them for days, mocking you for your efforts to ultimately just give up and choose not to look at the jar but to focus on the plant baby growing out of it instead, telling yourself that it was the plant you wanted anyway, the old jar was but a vessel to incubate the young greenery. Okay, I’m done. I’m just saying, you might like one of these.
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