SharonP
Seedling
I got an F. natalensis from Wigert's recently. After letting it settle in, I wanted to repot and decided to try root-over-rock for the first time. However, I found online instructions confusing. People were talking about wrapping the roots and rock with film wrap or aluminum foil, in which case how would the roots get any water? And I knew there was some step where you bury the whole thing for a year or more. So I just kind of winged it last night.
This was sooo hard. I needed about 6 hands, but only had 1 hand available most of the time because of having to swat all the mosquitoes with my other hand. I had to manhandle the poor tree so much that I accidentally broke off several baby aerial roots along the way, but the tree will hopefully survive.
Here's the before picture with the rock:

Here are photos of the untangled roots before and after washing and pruning:

Here's after tying the roots to the rock with 100% cotton string. From this angle, the roots look well behaved:

From the other side, one large root (on left of photo) wouldn't lie down flat. I didn't want to break it, so I left it as is:

Then I buried the rock and roots completely under the soil using a plastic pot and new soil mix:

I think I now need to leave it undisturbed for a year, but I'm not sure what to do at that point.
Do I just repot it with rock on top, and only rebury the roots that extend below the rock? Or do I uncover the rock gradually, removing the top 1 cm of soil every month until the rock and roots are exposed?
Also, all the root-on-rock trees I see are just a few very thick roots wrapped around the rock. But my tree has a few thick roots and dozens of tiny hair-size roots wrapped on the rock. What happens to those smaller roots once I expose the rock? Do they die back on their own (without damaging the tree)? Do I cut them back, leaving only the thick roots? Was I supposed to remove those thinner roots BEFORE burying the rock?
This was sooo hard. I needed about 6 hands, but only had 1 hand available most of the time because of having to swat all the mosquitoes with my other hand. I had to manhandle the poor tree so much that I accidentally broke off several baby aerial roots along the way, but the tree will hopefully survive.
Here's the before picture with the rock:

Here are photos of the untangled roots before and after washing and pruning:


Here's after tying the roots to the rock with 100% cotton string. From this angle, the roots look well behaved:

From the other side, one large root (on left of photo) wouldn't lie down flat. I didn't want to break it, so I left it as is:

Then I buried the rock and roots completely under the soil using a plastic pot and new soil mix:

I think I now need to leave it undisturbed for a year, but I'm not sure what to do at that point.
Do I just repot it with rock on top, and only rebury the roots that extend below the rock? Or do I uncover the rock gradually, removing the top 1 cm of soil every month until the rock and roots are exposed?
Also, all the root-on-rock trees I see are just a few very thick roots wrapped around the rock. But my tree has a few thick roots and dozens of tiny hair-size roots wrapped on the rock. What happens to those smaller roots once I expose the rock? Do they die back on their own (without damaging the tree)? Do I cut them back, leaving only the thick roots? Was I supposed to remove those thinner roots BEFORE burying the rock?