Topics

Single node cuttings experiment

This is about all there is to it as for making the tube.  Split a piece of pvc pipe down both side on the table saw and add some caps that have also been split and holes cut in the centers for a stem place.  Use tape to hold the caps together and they will hold the pipe together.  Remove leaves, install the bottom cap onto stem, set pipe halves in, fill it, water it and install top cap. A coarse guitar string can be used to saw the stem off under the bottom when it's ready. 

This would absolutely be way heavy for a lateral limb using sand.  One might use perlite or whatever.  I just used what I had and you can't see there's a rebar support behind it fastened with box tape.  Not even sure how one would fill a horizontal tube and water it.  Ya'll can figure that one out.  With outdoor fig mounds like Unk Lake Spur in the photo, maybe another topic, I pretty much have a good supply of straight up vertical limbs to play with.

[Single_node_airlayering_9] 

Stick around Charlie, I promise I will stop bashing..... Richie who? :-)

Charlie, I'm really enjoying reading your posts and learning from your experiments. I've been trying something similar to the single node air layering and I'm wondering why it is that you cut it from the tree before it goes dormant?

Scott

Quote:
Originally Posted by ScottA
Charlie, I'm really enjoying reading your posts and learning from your experiments. I've been trying something similar to the single node air layering and I'm wondering why it is that you cut it from the tree before it goes dormant?

Scott


It's just a big air layer when done with the pipe.  You could leave it till it goes dormant, depending what time of year you start.  Air layers I do this time of year will be left on till they go dormant, separated and up potted, kept in the garage for winter.  They will take off in spring like nothing ever happened.
 

Thank you Charlie. When you cut up the big air layer, how far above each node do you make the cut? Looing at photos of single-node cuttings to be rooted, I was surprised by how much wood was left above each node. I couldn't figure out the purpose of all that wood above the node.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ScottA
Thank you Charlie. When you cut up the big air layer, how far above each node do you make the cut? Looing at photos of single-node cuttings to be rooted, I was surprised by how much wood was left above each node. I couldn't figure out the purpose of all that wood above the node.


In the early days of the single node cuttings I didn't consider wood above the nodes.  Fact is, you want to cut very close above the nodes and leave all the wood possible as wood below the node for all of them since roots will form all over it and they supply the node above. 

I haven't posted photo's here in awhile but will try a couple from the most recent event.  It was a horizontal pipe and every one has survived into new plants.

Single_node_airlayering_20.jpg  Single_node_airlayering_21.jpg  Single_node_airlayering_22.jpg  Single_node_airlayering_23.jpg  Single_node_airlayering_24.jpg  Single_node_airlayering_25.jpg 


That's awesome. I imagine you would need the roots to be fairly mature so the don't break in the process. How long did you leave it on the tree?

Reply Cancel
Subscribe Share Cancel