The problem
Trailing plants tend to grow long and bare. A pothos or tradescantia that started full and lush can become a few sad vines with all the leaves clustered at the ends, trailing toward the floor with nothing in the middle. The instinct is to leave the plant alone and hope it fills out on its own. It rarely does. Yet the fix – cutting off healthy growth – feels counterintuitive and slightly brutal.
The hack
Pinching out means removing the growing tip of a stem, just after a node. This redirects the plant’s energy, prompting it to activate and produce new shoots. The result, in theory, is a bushier, fuller plant rather than a few straggly vines.
The method
Find a sad-looking stem and locate a node. Using clean fingers or sharp scissors, pinch or snip the stem just after that node, removing the growing tip and the first set of leaves if necessary. Do this on several stems for an even, fuller shape. The pieces you remove are perfect cuttings, so pop them in water to root them and replant them in the same pot to thicken it further.
The test
I pinched out the leggy stems on a tired-looking tradescantia, taking off more than I felt comfortable with. Within three weeks, new shoots had appeared at the nodes below each cut, and the plant was visibly denser. The cuttings I rooted and added back filled the gaps even more.
The verdict
Pinching out is not cruelty; it is one of the most useful things you can do for a trailing plant. They are built to recover from this kind of damage in the wild, and respond to it with vigour. Be brave, and you will end up with a fuller plant and new growth.