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Repotting guide

When & how to repot Colocasia Puckered Up (Colocasia esculenta 'Puckered Up')

Also called Puckered Up elephant ear.

More about colocasia puckered up

About Colocasia Puckered Up

Colocasia esculenta 'Puckered Up' · also called Puckered Up elephant ear · tropical

Colocasia 'Puckered Up' is a textural elephant ear with deeply puckered, blistered green leaves that give a quilted, three-dimensional look. It thrives in warmth, good light and constantly moist, rich soil, growing about 0.9-1.2 m. A bog-loving aroid, it overwinters as a dormant tuber in cooler climates.

Mature size: 0.9-1.2 m tall and 0.6-0.9 m wide; leaves 25-40 cm long.

How to tell colocasia puckered up needs repotting

Repotting on a calendar is less reliable than reading the plant. For colocasia puckered up, watch for these signs:

For the underlying biology of a pot-bound root system and why it stalls a plant, see our guide to spotting and fixing a root-bound plant.

How often to repot colocasia puckered up

Lift and divide every 3–4 years once clumps congest. Rather than a true repot, colocasia puckered up is lifted and divided once the clump congests and flowering drops off. Clumping, upright tropical perennial from a corm, forming a vase-shaped clump of heavily puckered leaves on sturdy petioles..

What size pot to step colocasia puckered up up to

Pot size matters less than depth and spacing here. When you replant colocasia puckered up, set the bulbs or tubers at the correct depth (a rough guide: two to three times their own height of soil over the top) and space them so they are not touching. A wide, shallow pot suits a clump better than a tall narrow one.

Not sure of the exact diameter? Our pot size calculator takes the current pot and root spread and tells you the right next size — it deliberately recommends a single step up, never a big jump.

The best time of year to repot colocasia puckered up

The only safe window is dormancy: wait until the foliage has yellowed and died back naturally, lift and divide then, and replant before or at the start of the next growing season. Disturbing colocasia puckered up in full growth or flower sets it back badly.

Step-by-step: repotting colocasia puckered up

  1. Wait for dormancy. Let colocasia puckered up foliage yellow and die back completely. Lifting while it is in growth wastes the energy it is storing for next year.
  2. Lift carefully. Loosen the soil well away from the bulbs/tubers with a fork and ease the whole clump out without spearing them.
  3. Separate the offsets. Gently pull the clump apart into individual bulbs or tubers. Keep only firm, healthy, blemish-free ones.
  4. Replant at the right depth. Reset them in fresh rich, moisture-retentive loam at the correct depth and spacing — not touching — so each has room to bulk up.
  5. Water in and rest. Water once to settle them, then keep on the dry side until growth resumes. Do not feed until leaves are actively growing.

Aftercare

After replanting colocasia puckered up, keep the soil barely moist — not wet — until shoots appear; bulbs and tubers rot in cold, saturated soil. Once leaves are growing strongly, resume normal watering. Hold off feeding until the plant is in active growth again.

The right soil mix for colocasia puckered up

Colocasia Puckered Up wants rich, moisture-retentive loam. Heavy, humus-rich mix that holds water; happy in boggy ground. Avoid gritty, fast-draining soils that let the shallow corm dry out between waterings. Always use fresh mix when you repot — reusing old, broken-down soil reintroduces the compaction and poor drainage you are repotting to fix.

Repotting colocasia puckered up — frequently asked questions

How often should you repot colocasia puckered up?

Lift and divide every 3–4 years once clumps congest for colocasia puckered up. Colocasia Puckered Up is lifted and divided, not "repotted". Every 3–4 years, once the foliage has died back and it is dormant, lift the clump, separate the offsets, and replant at the correct depth in rich, moisture-retentive loam. Crowding, not pot size, is what reduces flowering over time.

What size pot does colocasia puckered up need?

Pot size matters less than depth and spacing here. When you replant colocasia puckered up, set the bulbs or tubers at the correct depth (a rough guide: two to three times their own height of soil over the top) and space them so they are not touching. A wide, shallow pot suits a clump better than a tall narrow one. Use our pot size calculator to size it from the plant's current pot and root spread.

When is the best time of year to repot colocasia puckered up?

The only safe window is dormancy: wait until the foliage has yellowed and died back naturally, lift and divide then, and replant before or at the start of the next growing season. Disturbing colocasia puckered up in full growth or flower sets it back badly.

Do you "repot" colocasia puckered up, or lift and divide it?

You lift and divide it. Colocasia Puckered Up grows from bulbs or tubers, so instead of repotting you wait for dormancy, lift the congested clump, separate the healthy offsets, and replant them at the right depth and spacing. Doing this every 3–4 years restores flowering.

Should you fertilise colocasia puckered up after repotting?

Hold off feeding colocasia puckered up until it is in active growth again. Fresh soil already carries enough nutrients to get it re-established, and feeding disturbed roots too soon does more harm than good.

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