Hello Everyone and happy new year! I finally got a couple of days off so took a few pictures and am getting them up on here! Since i will be responding to the posts of other members in one shot, for the sake of other people reading if you respond dont quote the whole message! It is a lot to scroll through! I also included pictures of my citrus, most of them are either varieties that are tending to Polyembryony and so growing mostly true to type or are polyembryonic/nucellar selections and so are guaranteed true.
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Brandon I am very happy for your successes! I used to use the bag and paper towel method a lot but i found that it had two major limitations. Firstly, it only worked really well for me if the room temperature was between 70 and 75°F, and after moving last summer my current grow room stays between 62 and 65°F. Secondly, it doesnt work well if you have a lot of cuttings, it gets too cumbersome to manage and often I found myself filling up space set aside for the cuttings before they rooted with other plants. This season i tried Harvey's method using grafting tape and perlite and i am really liking the results. Rooting is never a sure thing, but this works well enough for me. My lights are also about 4 feet away, in addition to not burning the leaves i simply dont have enough individual lights to cover the area were i to hang them lower.
Jveri, I water by feel, checking every two to three days at the least. Overwatering is definitely a huge issue, so its better to give too little more often than to flood too often. Currently i give for a belden jumbo square which is about a 3/4 gallon pot 1/3 cup of water when they start to feel light, 1/2 if they are very very light which is a sign of water absorption in the cutting or baby roots. When you compare the weight of the freshly watered by lightly watered and the dry side by side you can really feel the difference. Some cuttings just dont take though, they start and then wilt. It happens and its unfortunate, but it is a process of nature and part of the game! Dont give up, you will learn lots for growing from cuttings that will help you take better care of trees.
Jrdewhirst, I am glad that your cuttings are doing well for you, I have found light to be an integral part of rooting cuttings, but if this works for you more power to you.
VeryNew2Figs, I am a little confused as to why you would wait until after the new year. It was my understanding that the fresher the cutting, the better the chances of rooting are. I admire your generosity, When people kill my trees for stupid reasons I usually dont regift them trees. If someone is not willing to pay you anything in any sort then they usually dont value the tree enough to take good care of it. That is just me though! I'm a bit attached to my trees and it really gets under my skin when people are neglectful.
Looking good KK, I always admire the two cup and humidity methods even if i never had good luck with them.
Pverde3 your little cuttings in cups look good. Be sure that they get plenty of light and not to overwater as they are very delicate at this stage of development. Frost damage on hard wood cuttings is not an issue usually, on the tree they will be fine to 15°F usually and i have received dormant trees and cuttings in winter with very little issues. If you ever do receive moldy cuttings in the future you should try to soak them for a few hours in hydrogen peroxide or to wash them in a mild bleach solution with a nail brush.
Congrats on your successes Leanderfig! Florea is a nice fig, i'm hoping to pick one up this year given how early it is.
Indestructible87 arent you just itching to get those babies started??
Arachyd, I also run my grow room cooler, 62-65°F, and i find that they grow a little bit slower but i am losing less figs to dessication and bark rotting. Now bark rotting is primarily from overwatering, but sometimes too much water matched with a bit of heat is causing it. The grafting tape is doing wonders against dessication of above ground wood. My heat mat situation is a bit spotty, I have four standard ones and one that is a bench mat, I was thinking of investing in some more bench mats next year but havent made up my mind. We will see where the discretionary money is lol. https://www.greenhousemegastore.com/product/gro-mat/s
Nice work Toronto Joe, They are looking good. The water bottle method looks like a winner so long as they have adequate drainage and dont get overwatered. I switched over to square pots in 2016, a friend giften me a couple and then when i crunched the numbers and saw the space savings i got very excited! These are worth the money for sure. https://www.greenhousemegastore.com/product/belden-jumbo-senior-square-pot/s I used to heat a screwdriver on a gas stove to melt holes lol
Jamesoneil1012 thats quite the endeavor, I hope that you continue to share your progress and that they root well for you!
Keep at it Haroon! One of the biggest challenges with humidty type systems (in my opinion) is introducing them to the outside world. I'm still at 3/4 on your UNK wild Nova and going strong, fingers crossed it stays that way.
Johnny K your baby trees look great, keep up the good work! By the way look up 5-1-1 soil mixes for citrus, will save you a lot of headache. I have even started to use it for my larger potted figs. Do you remember which Feminello lemon? There are at least 3 or 4.
CliffH that sounds like a great system, to move from full to partial humidity to prevent exposure shock. Good thinking.
Sas they look good, I had to double up a few because of space constraints as well, but its no biggie. I figure if only one takes you end up with a tree per pot allottment, if you have better than 50% success which can often be the case you end up with a bushy little tree.
Americanfiglover, welcome back to the game! After two years i hope you enjoy it as much as you used to!
Angelad, i would advise you not to touch your cuttings. They grow best when you leave them alone. I only disturb them if i notice that the soil has become too compacted and heavy. If this happens i carfully remove dirt with cutting from pot by tipping it on its side and then carefully remove dirt from cutting. They you take some dry soil and mix it with the compacted soil so that it is loose and nicely moist again. Trying all the while not to disturb or damage any roots. If the soil compacts and stays wet it will kill your baby roots and rot the bark off of the cutting. Other than fixing like that, they dont like to be disturbed too much.
Pino I completely agree and learned the same lesson the hard way. I also found it to be the case that so long as the cutting does not dessicate above ground or rot below ground it can still root even after months of inactivity. One of my two RDB fig trees actually didnt start rooting for 3 months. I still can scarcely believe that it ever did. It is a fine balance between too little and too much water and often varies by cutting.