It is late in the season, so I took all of my leftover cuttings, which were now 10 months old (don't ask) and of which most were still good. "Bad" ones were discarded.
It was finally cool enough, or so I thought (we have been hitting 80F on some days, but so far so good), so i could take the shade cloth off the top of my greenhouse (gets too hot in the summer, otherwise).
The plan was to keep it warm, which often causes the cuttings to break dormancy and grow leaves before roots. My thought was to allow good light levels through the double-wall translucent plastic without actual direct sun. The hope was that the new leaves would begin to put energy back into the cuttings to help push rooting, and overcome the finite amount of stored energy in the cutting that may have been disproportionately used for leaves rather than roots.
So far this seems to be working, after 3 weeks or so. The leaves are lusher, darker and more numerous and robust than on cuttings not in high light levels and many are starting to to push good roots. There have been little if any leaf drop on the cuttings, like the first leaves sometimes/often do. They seem stronger and healthier than cuttings rooted in low light. There is a ways to go with this experiment, and it won't be definitive, but the preliminary results are encouraging.
If this continues to progress as hoped it will probably mean that growing cuttings under grow lights would be an improvement in our rooting techniques.