Top 8 Orchid Questions & Answers about Keikis

An orchid keiki is a baby replica of the mother plant, a clone with the exact same DNA, reproduced asexually—not by pollination. This new baby plant will display the same flower pattern, shape, colors, and texture as the mother plant.

Keiki means “the little one, child, or baby” in Hawaiian, which is where the term originated.

 When it comes to orchid propagation, many questions arise. Below are the most common questions about keikis and detailed answers on how to care for them.

 Growing Leaves in Weird Places?

This is a common question until you realize that it’s not exactly a leaf. When there are growth hormones in excess, naturally produced during the development of a flower spike or new leaf, these hormones can induce the birth a of a keiki.Some orchids have a tendency to produce more keiki’s than others.

Dendrobiums,
Oncidiums,
Epidendrums, and
Phalaenopsis


orchids all have a high production rate of keikis. Other orchids hardly ever produce keikis.

Signs of a Healthy Orchid

Image Credit: © 2020 Orchideria.  All Rights Reserved. 


Keikis can be produced in two main places:

1) on a node along the flower spike and

2) near the stem, by the pseudobulb.

What do Keiki’s Say About the Health of my Orchid?

Don’t be extremely overjoyed at the first keiki that develops. Sometimes, keikis might be a sign that the orchid is under extreme stress and is trying to save its species before it dies. In attempts to not go extinct, it will use all its energy to produce a keiki.

It’s extremely hard to know when the keiki is a result of great growth and excess hormones, or when it’s a sign of stress. One good indicator is if a flower spike has shot out along with the keiki. This is an extreme sign of stress: a flower and a new plant before I die. Bucket list complete.

Other times, orchids are so healthy they have plenty of energy to produce a new plant.

Check all the signs of proper orchid growth: temperature, humidity, air flow and circulation, sunlight, fertilizer, and watering to see if your orchid is in the right conditions.

Most important: check the potting medium. If you change potting mediums from something the orchid was familiar with to a totally new potting medium, it might not adapt well. Check all the conditions before rejoicing with the new keiki.

Once verified, then party! You have achieved a job well done in orchid growing!!

What’s the Difference Between Keikis and New Growth?

Don’t mistake a keiki for a normal growth on your orchid. Orchids will produce flower spikes and new leaves constantly, which is the normal life cycle of an orchid. Especially if you leave the old flower spike on the plant after the blossoming period is over. This will naturally induce another bloom, whereas cutting back the flower spike will prevent any new growth from the spike.Sometimes, though, it’s not a bloom that the orchid will produce.

A keiki is very different, in that it will start producing its own roots and leaves. It might look like a flower spike at first, but “soon” new leaves and roots will spring forth from this growth, and not from the original stem. By soon, I mean in 6 to 8 months.

How Do I Get Rid of Orchid Keikis?

If you don’t want to keep the keiki on the Phalaenopsis, you can remove it. The elegance of the Phal orchid with it’s one slender spike is maintained by removing keikis after they are mature enough to live on their own.

If you leave the keikis on the mother plant, they will eventually grow into their own plant, changing the overall appearance of the Phal. The two connected plants become bushier and wider. Eventually the flower spike will not be able to support the weight of the keiki and it will bow down, searching for bark.  

To prevent any keikis from growing, cut back the flower spike as soon as all the blooms fall off. This will force the orchid to either go dormant for a few a few weeks (Phalaenopsis do not have a dormancy cycle) or focus on root and new leaf growth.

Be sure to cut back the flower spike with a sterilized knife and apply cinnamon to the open wound on the spike after the blossoming period is over.

What is Keiki Paste and How Does it Work?

On the other hand, let’s say you want to induce new growth after the yearly blossom has fallen off. What induced the new birth of a keiki is the excess hormones in the mother plant. This phenomenon was studied by orchid enthusiasts, and they replicated these hormones into a paste.Keiki paste is a stimulant that is rich in growth hormones. Not all pastes are keiki paste, so read carefully what you buy. Most pastes are for root growth. Orchid growers discovered that if you apply a paste that is rich in growth hormones (cytokinin hormone) to specific places—nodes—on the orchid, keikis will be induced.

The science behind the keiki paste: all plants have auxins that flow within the plant. Auxins are specific plant hormones that cause the elongation of cells in plants, giving them the growth pattern that is necessary. Auxins concentrate on the higher portion of the plant, where active growth is forming.

If the plant suffers from a fire, broken off, or devoured by a predator, the auxins in the base of the plant will sense the loss of flow from the top and kick in at a lower point on the plant. They produce new growth from the dormant nodes closer to the base. This growth can be new leaves, a new flower spike, or in our high hopes, a keiki.

Don’t cut back the spike,or at least, cut it back leaving a few nodes on the stem. Then apply keiki paste to the nodes, before they develop into either a new spike or new leaves.

When Do You Remove Keikis To Repot Them?

You should keep the keiki on the mother plant until it has at least 2 leaves and 4 roots of its own.  Some people say to leave the keiki on the mother plant until the roots are 3 inches long. A third group declares the 3-3 rule: three leaves and three roots.

I prefer to go by number of roots than length.

Why? If you are relying on only one root that is three or four inches long, the possibility that the root will be able to supply enough nutrients to maintain survival are minimal.

Three or four roots, even though shorter, can spread through the potting medium, expanding the surface area to access water and nutrients. If one root dies, you still can count on the other three to keep the orchid alive.

How Long Does It Take for a Keiki to Grow?

This can take anywhere from 8 months to a year to form. Be patient. Removing the keiki from the mother plant too early will hurt it, since it relies on the mother plant to maintain its survival.

How Do You Repot a Keiki?

There are 2 ways to remove a keiki. One is to twist it off at the base of the flower flower, where it is attached. The other way is to leave part of the old spike on. Once the 4 roots are healthy and firm, cut the flower spike about two fingers from the keiki. Let’s say you cut it too near the keiki. If an infection sets in, there will be no way to remove it without damaging the keiki.

Always leave room for possible ways to remedy causalities.

Also, the flower spike—even though small—will give the new keiki some stability when it comes to potting the keiki in its new pot.

To be safe, pot the keiki in the same pot as its mother. The mother plant can regulate the humidity, water levels, fertilizer needs, and pH better than the keiki. This maintains the keiki stable until it has enough roots that can do this by itself, which will coincide with the next potting period in 2 years.

If you want to repot the new keiki in its own pot, chose a tiny pot and repot with a finer-grade potting medium, preferably bark. I use pure sphagnum moss for all my keikis, but keep an eye out for over-watering. 

In all cases, the roots on the new keiki will be aerial roots, since they grew from the mother plant on the flower spike.Aerial roots don’t like to be placed under potting medium once they are fully formed. Worse if it’s humid sphagnum moss. This is why bark is more appropriate, since bark lets the roots dry out thoroughly in between each watering. The moss, on the other hand, will retain a lot more water and humidity.

If you use pure sphagnum moss, the fully developed aerial roots will have a hard time adapting. These will eventually die, but in their place, new roots will form that have a better chance of surviving. 

You’ll need to mist the new keiki plant daily until it is stable and old enough to wait a few days between watering. Tender, loving care is always good when treating keikis.

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If this article was useful, or if you have any questions, please comment in the box below! I love to interact with other orchid growers and enthusiasts, no matter what level of expertise.

Happy Cultivating!

Signature Amanda Matthews



Amanda Matthews

Amanda Matthews is a theological professor, author, pastor, and a motivational speaker. She's passionate about spreading hope and teaching. Her hobbies include biking, cultivating orchids, and exploring nature trails. She now lives in Kansas, while raising her two children. To read more, go to https://orchideria.com/about-the-author

23 thoughts on “Top 8 Orchid Questions & Answers about Keikis

  1. I have an orchid the kids bought me from Kroger last year. The flowers died off then the leaves fell off. I set whole pot with holes in bottom in a bowl with water. The stems never started turning brown. In February of this year it started growing leaves about 33 or 4 inches from the top. Yesterday I cut the baby off and replanted by itself. I also have another (something growing but not sure what it is.

    1. Hi Ruth! That is so thoughtful of your kids to get you an orchid. The flowers falling off is normal and expected. If it was a Phalaenopsis (or moth orchid) than they will stay in bloom for three months, sometimes four, but they eventually fall off. What I was more concerned with was the leaves falling off too, which makes me think you don’t have a Phal, but another orchid that has a longer dormancy cycle. (If it is a Phal, then you need to check on watering and fertilizer, because something went wrong…) Good news: you have leaf growth, which is always a great sign. I hope the baby keiki you cut off had enough roots to stabilize itself, and a few good leaves. If yes, you’re on your way to success! Wish you the best in cultivating your orchid!

      1. Hi Amanda! My phil orchid has a gorgeous, blooming keiki w 3 leaves (1″, 2″, 4″ long) + 2 aerial roots (1″, 4″ long) but the flower spike above is actually growing and preparing to send out blooms. Mother looks incredibly healthy and happy… has a second old flower spike with new growth, really healthy aerial roots, fat green leaves, and is producing new healthy leaves. I can’t find ANY info on what to do when you have a keiki below new blooms on the bloom spike! What do you recommend? Maybe this is my plants last Ditch effort at survival, BUT I find that hard to believe based on how much new, healthy growth I see at every level of the plant. Thank you in advance for suggestions/support!

  2. I’m so happy to see this post! I have several orchids which re-bloom on the old bloom stem or grow a new stem from the base (I’m experimenting with cutting or not cutting the bloom stems). One orchid is making TWO babies now which I’ve never seen before! So glad to learn how to replant them when it’s time.

    1. Hi Beach Gal! I’m so glad that your orchid is producing not 1, but 2 keikis! Wow! That is so exciting! I wish you all the best when you replant them.

  3. Amanda i’m very new to orchids but i have one orchid which has a keiki growing below the leaves just above the wood chips. it’s too young to remove. it has two leaves but no aerial roots. when roots do come how do i remove this from the mother plant and should i put it in the same pot at the mother plant which really now needs repotting? thanks.

    1. Hi Diane,

      You’re right about leaving the keiki on until it has good roots. It’s best if the roots are above 3 inches long, but as long as they are plump, healthy, green, and will supply the orchid with nutrients on their own, you’re ready to remove the keiki.

      Keiki’s will twist off the plant if you hold them tightly between your fingers and turn. There is always a risk of ripping a leaf, so go slow.

      Another way to remove the keiki is with a sterile knife, and pull the keiki away from the stem as you cut/slice. I think this way provides a cleaner, smoother cut that is easier to heal later on with cinnamon.

      As for the mother plant in the pot, you can repot them together, but if you have to repot, it’s ok to pot it in sphagnum moss by itself or fine-grade orchid bark, made for seedlings. Sphagnum workds better in my opinion, but be careful about how much water you provide. If you weren’t going to repot, then I’d plant it with the mother.

      Wishing you the best with your keiki and tell me how it goes. 🙂

      -Amanda

  4. Hello Amanda! Thanks for sharing great information.
    I’m hoping you may be able to provide some guidance. I received a lovely blooming orchid as a birthday gift in January 2020. From web-surfing, I believe it may be a Doritaenopsis… I-Hsin Golden Prince? After it finished blooming, the flower spikes never turned brown, so I left them alone. In Sept/Oct, one spike rebloomed and a keiki started on the other spike! The Keiki now has 3 leaves with a 4th started (~1/4″) and 4 air roots (three are 1.5-2″ and one ~ 1/4″). The most amazing thing is that it also has TWO flower spikes and BOTH are now ~5″ long! The main body of the original spike has died back to just above the offshoot supporting the keiki.
    Despite hours of web-surfing on & off during the past 2 weeks, I cannot find any guidance on what to do with a keiki WITH spikes. I feel the mother plant is healthy as it has a new leaf (~1.5″ long now, and air roots seem to be healthy and growing.
    What shall I do? Leave it alone? Snip at the stalk, and put in pot with Mom?
    I’m pleased as punch, but also baffled 🙂 I would love to see the spikes bloom, but need guidance 🙂
    As FYI, for the past 10 months, I started soaking my 3 orchids for ~3-5 min once a week, in Tiger Bloom fertilizer water, with 50% the recommended ratio. They are in bark, spag, rock mixtures in ceramic orchid pots.
    Many thanks and warm regards,
    JMo

    1. Hi JMo,

      Thank you for your comment. You made my day. 🙂

      Doritaenopsis are known for their ability to rebloom constantly and stay in bloom for a longer period than their parents, the Phalaenopsis and Doritos. That is why you saw a spike now and not only next January, on the yearly cycle. Wow, you are so blessed to have a keiki that is growing because of great conditions. Usually, keikis grow because it’s a plea for help. When your orchid produced a new leaf, that signaled it was growing well. So in all, it sounds like you are on the right track. Congratulations. This keiki is extremely amazing since I’ve never seen a keiki with spike before. Absolutely fantastic!

      I’ll give you two choices below as to what to do with this keiki. Whatever you choose to do, know that there are pros and cons.

      A sign that you need to remove the keiki from the older spike in the near future is that the spike has withered down to where the keiki is. So soon or later, it has to come off. The question is when?

      It won’t hurt the orchid if you leave the keiki on the original spike on and let it bloom naturally, and only after those blooms have fallen off, then remove it. This is your first option. I’d probably leave it on, just because I’m a more curious grower. I would want to see how the final result turns out over risking a repot and possibly forfeiting the entire spike.

      The second option is to repot it now since the older spike has withered. Yet, every repot is a hazard, especially to a young plant. The aerial roots will now have to adapt to being in medium and will possibly die. Until new roots are grown, it will expend serious energy. Since your keiki already has a few good leaves and sufficient roots to live by itself, you can snap it off and pot it with its mother even with the spikes. If you want, you can pot in pure sphagnum moss since the roots will be tiny and tender and will adjust well. That is really up to you. If you haven’t used pure sphagnum before, I’d just pot it with its mother since watering will be different. The downside to this second option is that the keiki might not bloom if you repot it now.

      So, sooner or later… Either way, it needs to get repotted. Doritaenopsis do have the fame of reblooming constantly. It might just bloom, and bloom, and bloom…and you’ll never have the perfect moment to remove it. I wish I could tell you emphatically, “Do this!” or “Do that” but it’s really up to you. Either way you choose has risks. If it were me, I’d repot it right after the last bloom from the new keiki has fallen off.

      I wish you the best with this special keiki!!

      -Amanda

  5. Happy Thanksgiving, Amanda!
    Thank you so much for taking the time to ponder this lovely plant’s situation and for offering good options. I believe, like you, I’m curious, so I’ll wait it out and see if the keiki blooms!

    I’d be happy to email you a picture if you’d like to send me an email address, I will not share and will honor your privacy.
    Regards and stay safe,
    JMo

    1. Hi JMo,
      Thank you for the holiday message. I hope your Happy Thanksgiving went well, too.

      I’d love a picture of the keiki! 🙂 That would be amazing! Thank you so much!

      You can send the pic to this email at amandamatthews@orchideria.com. If you add a comment on the website with a pic, my website host will automatically send the entire message to the trash can. I get some pretty awful pics by all kinds of spammers so I have to keep strict rules about that. 

      I’m looking forward to seeing this over-achieving orchid and wish you the best with this keiki!
      -Amanda

  6. Hi Amanda, wondering if you can offer any advice – a tiny Keiki has just started growing on the stem of my phal but unfortunately my 5 year old child has broken the stem off by accident. Is there anyway of preserving the stem and/or saving the Keiki? Currently I’ve just put it into a cup of water. The Keiki itself is very small snd has no roots yet. Thanks!

    1. Hi Moira,

      The chances are very slim of actually putting the spike back and having the keiki survive. i wrote this article ( https://orchideria.com/orchid-spike-broke/ ) about what to do when that happens, but still, unfortunately, it’s extremely hard to make reattach it once it’s fully broken. If the keiki is big enough, it might survive… So try that article because it’s better than not doing anything at all.

      -Amanda

  7. Hello Amanda. I have a phalaenopsis (my first orchid) which isn’t doing so good. Droopy leaves and no roots but I noticed a keiki growing on the stem and couple of tiny new leaves growing on the mother plant. Will my phal be okay?

    1. Hi Sen,

      With no roots and droopy leaves, the orchid is having a hard time getting water and staying hydrated. In this case, the keiki is a sign that the orchid is struggling. Try to raise the humidity around the orchid. I suggest using a shag-n-bag method to try to keep it hydrated until it produces new roots. You can read that article here: https://orchideria.com/sphag-bag-method/

      -Amanda

  8. Hi Amanda,
    Worried about my keiki, it flipped over and broke a 5 inch leaf including the center baby leaf, the one that is just barely sprouting: gone !
    Left on the mother plant spike 2 baby leaves no more than an inch long, no roots yet, I put a little bit of moss around for moisture , the mother plant is doing very well, good roots, just that the pot is the small one that they sell it on and not very stable and with I think is only coconut fibers… can it be a good idea to repot the mom? And can the keiki survive?
    I was so excited for my first keiki!
    I have learned a lot from your channel advice,
    appreciate your help!

    1. Hi Romy,
      Congratulations on your keiki! That’s always a good feeling. The keiki is very fragile and it depends a lot more on the leaves at this stage than the roots. With the broken leaf, it’s hard to tell what the chances are of it’s survival. Since it is still on the mother plant, there is a good chance that it will survive. Keep it in moss, as you have done, and it’s okay to go ahead and repot. The mother plant will suffer, but is she isn’t doing well, then it’s risky that you’ll lose both the keiki and her. So I’d repot. If the keiki makes it, then awesome, but if it doesn’t, then at least you saved one of the two. This all depends on how healthy the mother plant is.
      -Amanda

  9. I left the keikei with the roots a foot long on the mother orchids now I just noticed one keikei is about to bloom can I cut it now I got 3 keikei from one flowering stem need help

    1. Hi Beth,
      You can cut it now or leave it. It’s mainly up to you. In my opinion though, I would leave it alone. It has been accustomed to receiving nutrients from the mother plant even though it can survive by itself. If you decide to remove it now, it would have to support the new growth all by itself, which it can do, but it might not like it. Once the flower spike has opened, bloomed, and all have fallen off, then I’d cut it off.
      Best regards,
      Amanda

  10. Hi Amanda.
    I have an orchid that I’ve just repotted 14 keikis from. There’s another 4 waiting to be repotted. Is this normal as it just keeps reproducing them?. I’ve had the orchid about 4 /5 years and it has regularly flowered.
    The orchid begins with a D but just can’t remember it at the moment.
    Also not sure what I’m going to do with all these new orchids. 😱
    They already have quite a few leaves in and look really healthy.
    I can send you pictures if you like.

  11. I bought my DIL an orchid for Mother’s Day several years ago and bought myself a mini orchid. Hers didn’t make it, we eventually figured out it was because she was watering it with tap water that went through a water softener (lesson learned). My mini somehow was moved and hidden so it was months before I found it blooming behind the microwave and I had a keiki. I didn’t know much about caring for orchids back then and the mama died and I cut off the keiki. It has been struggling for about 4 years now – 3 sturdy small leaves and one root about 3/4” long. I have it in sphagnum moss and mist it daily. I’ve been letting it soak in aloe vera juice for about 20 minutes every 2 weeks for the last 3 months, but I’m not seeing progress. My orchids are in the bathroom, north facing window, temp between 65-70, humidity 40+. My other orchids are doing great and I’ve got several flower spikes starting for the new season.

    Any suggestions?

  12. Two keikis have survived for several months after removing them from a flowering nobile dendrobium. last year. The original plant had many white blooms and two large keikis. Today, one of the keikis has a few white blooms with pink edges. If the new plants are clones, where did the pink come from?

    1. Hi Anita,
      That is a good question and I really don’t have an answer for you. Maybe it will turn colors later when it’s more mature. Let’s see…
      -Amanda

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