Has anyone else tried washing fig cuttings with rubbing alcohol?, and observed increased callusing of the treated cuttings?
<EDIT> Do not wash with Alcohol!!! It seems to kill bacteria including the benificials, but not all fungal spores.
An initial reason for contemplating the use of alcohol was to reduce mold growth. I had one large caliper cutting that had possible mold growth and had been already treated with hormone ( 1 week in moss), instead of starting over I brushed it with alcohol. It did not appear that there were any ill effects from the alcohol exposure after being potted in a cup. After observing the increased callus formation of the hormone treated cuttings, I decided to including alcohol as a test variable.
An observation of the Hormone comparison tests that were performed,is that the hormone treated cuttings developed calluses quicker than the untreated cuttings. Once cuttings callus they almost never rot (in my experience). The main components in the Dip N Grow other than Rooting Hormone is alcohol.
Date: 2/3/2013
I applied 50% isopropyl rubbing alcohol to several cuttings (and let them air dry for a few minutes) then placed them in damp sphagnum moss @ 76 deg F. They were compared to cuttings started at the same time which were treated with Dip N Grow hormone @ full strength (100%, undiluted).
Experiment with undiluted Dip N Grow.
The test groups are
Hormone undiluted (100%):
A1...Scoring "single wide slice"
A2...No Scoring
No Hormone (50% Alcohol wash):
B1...Scoring "single wide slice"
B2...No Scoring
There are 3 cuttings in each group.
The callus formation on the Alcohol Treated cuttings was greater that that of the Hormone Treated cuttings at 1 week. The Hormone treated cuttings had more "primordial root formation" but less callus formation on the bottom/treated end.
I will post pictures at the 2 week point for comparison.