Generally fall or winter flowering, so separating them now is probably not a bad idea. Ease them out of the pot, try not to cut or break any...
Not sure, but if I acquired it, I'd start looking at Hoya spp. Are the leaves kind of thick and waxy?
It's dead. That black stems and leaves description tells the complete story. It's fungal and nearly always fatal. People who raise these...
I'd believe it is an aroid of some sort, maybe an anthurium. Large family. Rainforest environment with high humidity and well drained soil, and...
Dracaena deremensis. Surviving but not thriving.
Looks like seasonal aging of the leaves. I'd expect them to yellow a bit more, then drop for a dormancy period corresponding to your winter. Good...
Looks like Argemone mexicana.
The reason your aerials grow so long is that they are trying to find a substrate in which to anchor the roots. You can prune them off the main...
Stunning. Love them all, but those lacy crinolines on some of them are fabulous. Thanks for the link.
Maybe 6-10 cm below the green petioles. The stem is still fairly young there and rooting should be easy enough. I'd probably let it dry for a few...
Very unscientific of me, but the impression I'm getting is one of either perilla related or patchouli related. Mostly because of the dentate...
Can't say, but I'm sure it is not an amaranth.
It may actually flower without apparent dormancy. Give it a couple of months. I'm in Florida and all my amaryllis are outside, some in pots, some...
No, you don't need what you would call a bulb for a bulbing plant to offset. The tissue on the root end has to think it's a bulb, but you might...
It's a hawthorn, Crataegus spp. Don't know which one.