Easy Way to Root Cuttings 🌳🌱🌲 Softwood & Semi-hardwood
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- čas přidán 3. 08. 2020
- How I root all kinds of cuttings including hydrangea, roses and lavender, using softwood and semi-hardwood.
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Easy Way to Root Cuttings 🌳🌱🌲 Softwood & Semi-hardwood
A very simple way to root cuttings of perennials, trees and shrubs, including roses, lavender and hydrangea.
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Your videos are the best. I enjoy that you are straight to the point but very detailed. No background music, etc. I have learned so much from your videos. Thank you for sharing your knowledge of plants & gardening.
Very informative and straight to the point. Half way through the video I started planning on all the different cuttings I would want to try after finishing the video. When it got to the part where Robert said they would be sitting in pots for 2-3 years: I knew I would be buying plants from nurseries
Great Info. Simple, straight forward and practical and I bet a high degree of success too! Thanks for the fantastic info.
You have described my gardening style--keep it basic and easy. Wow, two years before permanently planting. I will "give it a try" on my Mt. Laurel.
I really enjoyed your video :) Very informative, terrific teaching voice!
Aloe Vera has a rooting hormone in it called Salicylic Acid, Aloe is very easy to grow and very effective
I have used it successfully on many plants as well.
Thank You, appreciate all your videos. I also purchased your soil science and plant science books. I highly recommend both. Imagine at 64 I have learned that most of what I have been taught, and thought I knew about gardening was wrong.
Great, sensible advice!
Thanks I did Not learn anything new , but still great to watch . Thankx ☺
Excellent information Robert.
Super lesson!
Thank you! Subscribed!
Thanks for another great vid.
Another 1st class tutorial, this time in rooting cuttings. I noticed you placed the cuttings in the centre of the pot. Here in the UK the gardening programs say the cuttings should be placed down the edge of the pot, however no-one explains the reason for this procedure.
Roots do seem to grow better along the edge of the pot, but in my system the edge of the pot is not covered with the little greenhouse. I am not sure it makes a big difference. If they root - it will work both ways, and if they don't root - the placement will not make them root.
Pete, I'm aware this is done because the edge of the pot can be warmer and a better condition for rooting at the edge of the pot here in the UK!
Nice work! Thanks
Excellent, so very helpful. Thank you! 👍
Thanks!!! I can't wait to go through your videos and get propagating!!! Thanks for such valuable information! :)
Awesome!
Your thoughts on wounding the internode?
Why do you bury the pot in the ground instead of transplanting the plant into the ground?
They are easier to move in spring.
👍👍
Why do we have to leave one leaf?
I want to do this with rose cuttings, but they have no leaves now
Not entirely sure, but I suspect it helps the new bud start developing. If a cutting has no leaf it can still work. Hardwood cuttings never have leaves.