How To Care For and Repot A Ponytail Palm
Today, I want to show you how to care for and repot a ponytail palm
I bought this plant as a little specimen in a 6″ pot at our Santa Barbara Farmers Market 7 years ago. I put it in an 8″ terra cotta pot when I got home.
Then, a few years later, into the 13″ turquoise glazed pot it went. I could tell it was now feeling a bit stunted (how much would be made evident after I took it out of that pot) so another transplant was in order. Here’s some info about this “really cool” plant, care tips both as a houseplant and in the garden along with the steps I took to re-pot my 3-headed Ponytail Palm.
If you’re only interested in how I care for my Ponytail Palms, then scroll about halfway down. As usual, there’s a video at the end.
Ponytail Palms grow slowly but need pots large enough to hold their bulbous bases. Those bulbs store water so as the plant grows. You need to be a muscle man (or woman) to lift a large Ponytail. The tallest I’ve seen was 15 feet, and the bulbs were huge. I wouldn’t want to move that!
Some Of Our General Houseplant Guides For Your Reference:
- Guide To Watering Indoor Plants
- Beginner’s Guide To Repotting Plants
- 3 Ways To Successfully Fertilize Indoor Plants
- How to Clean Houseplants
- Winter Houseplant Care Guide
- Plant Humidity: How I Increase Humidity For Houseplants
- Buying Houseplants: 14 Tips For Indoor Gardening Newbies
- 11 Pet-Friendly Houseplants
Here’s a Nolina enjoying the great outdoors at the Los Angeles Arboretum.
Here’s the future deluxe home of the Ponytail Palm before its “jazz me up” paint job. I got this composite 20″ plastic pot at Marshall’s for 22 bucks. It’s good & sturdy – a real steal but a bit too blah for my tastes.
Contrary to their name, Ponytail Palms actually aren’t palms. There’s varying opinion as to what plant family they’re classified in – the Asparagus Family or the Agave Family.
To further confuse things, I learned the botanic name as Beaucarnea recuvata but some people list it as Nolina recurvata. Confusing – the nomenclature and classification of this plant are definitely not cut and dry.
Sitting on its pedestal in the pretty pot, root bound as can be.
Ponytail Palms act more like succulents as they are drought tolerant. That round base is their water storage mechanism and they’re often seen growing alongside cacti.
Here’s how I re-potted the Ponytail Palm:
- Lucy was here to do the filming so I recruited her to help me haul it in the garage to my potting/craft table.
- First of all, I tied up the ponytails which you’ll see in the photos below so they weren’t in my way.
- I took my pruning saw & ran it around the edges to loosen the root ball. It helped a bit but Pony wasn’t budging at all. I held the bulbs & Lucy pulled the pot. It took brute force but I didn’t want to break the pot.
This is why we had a hard time getting it out of the pot. Like cramming a size 10 foot into a size 6 stiletto!
A hairdresser I am not but this updo keeps the leaves out of the way while I’m doing this.
Here is the rest of how to care for and repot a ponytail palm:
- I used a 1/1 mix of organic potting soil ( I’m partial to Happy Frog because of its high-quality ingredients. It’s great for container planting, including houseplants) & succulent & cactus mix. Ponytail Palms need to stay on the dry side & to have excellent drainage. The light mix ensures this.
- Ponytails really don’t need fertilizer. I added in a good dose of worm castings at planting time. Twice a year I’ll water in a mix of manure (Moo Poo Tea is the brand I use) & worm castings tea.
- Never sink the bulbous base lower than its existing soil line. You’ll notice this in the video.
- The root ball was left up about an inch or so higher than I wanted it as the weight of the plant will pull it down in the light planting mix.
- This Ponytail Palm was left dry for about a week & then thoroughly watered it in.
- I top dressed it about a month after the re-potting. I wanted it to settle in before bedecking it with the blue/purple mussel shells & the green glass disks.
I top dressed the soil in mussel shells I collected on the beach (I found them empty – no mussels were harmed!) & sprayed them to match the pot & added green glass disks to shiny things up.
Here’s my Ponytail in the purple/blue custom-painted pot with its new Burro’s Tail Sedum friends that were taken as cuttings from my front garden.
As far as houseplant care goes, a Ponytail Palm couldn’t be any easier. This is one plant which is tolerant of the dry air our homes are notorious for.
The two most important things to know regarding having this plant in your home are: it needs high light and you must keep it on the dry side.
Here’s the short list of care tips:
Light
High. 5 to 6 hours of direct sunlight a day ideally a few feet away from the window. And, rotate your plant every few months so it get light evenly on all sides.
Watering
Low. Once every 3-4 weeks at the most. If it’s in a really small pot, then it will need it a bit more often.
This is what baby Ponytail Palms look like.
Pests
Susceptible to mealybugs & spider mites. If the infestation is not bad, a good spray down in the sink or shower will get rid of both. Be sure to spray the undersides of the leaves & in the nodes.
Positives
Ponytail Palms, unlike many other houseplants, are not toxic to pets.
They are great for people who travel because of their ease of care.
As they grow, they develop a beautiful trunk & become quite interesting.
Negatives
They do grow very slowly, especially in homes environments. So if you want a larger one, buy it that one. That being said, tall Ponytail Palms aren’t always easy to find in the interior trade.
Because they store water in their bulbs, they are easy to overwater. Don’t!
Cats love to chew on their crunchy foliage.
Here’s my other Ponytail Palm which lives in the front garden.
That’s it.
My two Ponytails live outdoors all year long and the more I ignore them, the better they seem to do. They grow in containers on my patios and I water them really well every 4 weeks. I do treat them to a worm casting/manure tea blend once in early Spring and once in late Summer which keeps them happy as can be. I repot them every 3 years (or so) because they have a multitude of fleshy roots.
You should get one of these Cousin It look-alike plants. They’re fun to look at and easy to take care of. Be sure to check out our houseplant care book, Keep Your Houseplants Alive because the Ponytail Palm is in it. If you don’t have enough light for this one, then you’ll find another plant in the book which suits you and your home to a T!
I just wanted to show you these few pics from a couple of years back when a monarch hatched off this plant:
The caterpillar came from the butterfly weed in the backyard & climbed up the pot.
After a few days of crawling around, it attached itself to one of the leaves.
It morphed into a chrysalis (you can see the butterfly inside) & 1 day, it was gone.
For more information about this houseplant and others, you can check out our book: Keep Your Houseplants Alive!
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- About the Author
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Nell, the founder of Joy Us garden, was born into a gardening family and grew up in Connecticut’s countryside. After living in Boston, New York, San Francisco, & Santa Barbara, she now calls the Arizona desert home. She studied horticulture & garden design, working in the field all her life. Nell is a gardener, designer, blogger, Youtube creator, & author. She’s been gardening for a very long time & wants to share what she’s learned with you.
Hi Tamara – PPs like high light & low water. they sore water in their bulbous bases & roots. If it’s “kind of mushy” you may be able to save it. Take it out of the pot & inspect the roots & see how they look. If they look healthy, you can always repot it into fresh succulent & cactus mix. Nell
Hi Penny – How strange; I’ve never heard of rocks glued to the surface before. Perhaps it’s so they don’t fall off when shipped?? Anyway, I’d get those glued rocks off of there because it’ll impede air flow & water absorption. If you can do it without breaking the pot, try that. Nell
Hi! I bought a 30 year old ponytail palm that’s 8 ft tall and has only 2 inches of soil between the bulb and the pot edge. It’s an 18″ pot!! I live in Indiana so I can’t put her in the ground. At this time I have moved her outside but it rained and she looks like she’s trying to tell me something… I just don’t talk plants. Should I bring it back inside? Should I re pot in a half barrel? Should it be out in the rain? Help!
tips of leaves brown and the whole plant not too green am I not watering it enough? its indoors all winter not enough light? idk might have killed it
Hi Kelly – Ponytail Palms store water in those big bulbous bases & also in their roots. They don’t like to stay consistently moist at all. If you’re getting a lot of rain, then yes, take it in or put it under a covered patio with a lot of light. Ponytail Palms can stay tight in their pots for a while. You will at some point need to transplant as it grows. Be sure to get help – a large PP is very heavy. Nell
Hi Dana – The tips of PPs are usuaually brown – it’s the nature of the plant. They’re high light plants so it sounds like yours may not have gotten the light it needs over the winter. Nell
Hi Nell, love you as well!!! I bought my PP at Walmart. It looks really healthy but, the whole trunk is mossy green, kinda like covered in algae or something?? Not sure what it is but looks organic, not painted. Any clue as to what that might be? Should it be scrubbed off?? I keep it in the house next to a large bay window as I live in New England, it will get too cold in Winter.
Thanks Nell, looking forward to hearing from you. Keep up this awesomeness!!
Hi there Karen! I’ve never seen moss or algae on the trunk of a PP before but I have heard of it. PPs like dry conditions so neither moss nor algae goes hand in hand with that. It’s probably an algae forming from being kept to wet &/ or a poor planting mix. Yes, wipe it off. If the mix looks bad, repot it into a good quality, fresh succulent & cactus mix. And, don’t water your PP too often! Nell
Hi Nell, I have a happy success story about PP’s! About 40 yrs ago, my grandmother gave me a PP the size of a quarter…so it is very important to me. It has managed to grow slowly as our conditions are not optimum. It has been kept fairly root bound as I don’t want it to get too large. A few years ago, kept too dark and too wet during our Maine winter, the rootscompletely rotted off! Devastated, I refused to give up on this precious plant. Besides that, a large squirrel climbed it and broke off the growing tip. What to do???
The bulb’s diameter was about 6″. I kept it out of soil for a year, with the base barely in water. The roots grew back, amazingly. The top regrew,as well, and it is now 7″ in diameter and fully recovered.
Hi Sandy – I love a happy story! Ponytails are tough but I never realized they are that tough. Thanks so much for sharing! Nell