| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Need advice on thick cuttings |
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jtp
Registered: Posts: 980 |
I've got several thick cuttings that I want to root. I've never tried rooting large cuttings. If successful, I imagine they will make nice trees in a short time. They are longer than a gallon zip-bag will allow. How do you guys get yours started? |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
I cut em in half and stick them in the baggie in sphagnum, and they root just fine! |
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jtp
Registered: Posts: 980 |
The nodes are pretty far apart. I hate to try with fewer than the total on the cuttings now. |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,727 |
My limited experience is that thick cutings take longer to root but produce great big trees much faster than small cuttings. My experience dribbling water into sphagnum moss is that it collects at the bottom and suffocates the base even though none drips out. I kept an eye on it but didn't realize the moss was acting as a saturated sponge at the bottom while the top was drying out. I've put mine in a pot big enough to submerge the whole cutting and used dirty perlite and it's worked great. I watered them most days because there was very little to hold the water. If only 1/4" is sticking out the top there's no need for a humidity chamber. I also used dip & grow. |
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vitalucky
Registered: Posts: 241 |
I tried it last spring with Peter's Honey (cuttings about 1.5") by planting them directly into 3gal with mulch. They rooted just fine and developed 2 or 3 fine new trunks each. |
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Grasa
Registered: Posts: 1,819 |
Hey John, this is my first fatcutting. This was a piece of the trunk in which I had an airlayer above it, so after that one was removed, I cut this one. |
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rich
Registered: Posts: 110 |
To try to root long thick cuttings, I throw some damp sphagnum pear into a plastic shopping bag, stick the cuttings in that, wrap a rubber band around the bag and cuttings then put the bag in a flower pot for support. I then take another plastic shopping bag and put that over the exposed tops of the cuttings and secure the lower end of the bag to the flower pot with another rubber band. In that way both tops and bottoms received moisture. |
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northeastnewbie
Registered: Posts: 407 |
Just get a horizontal plastic container like a the ones for wallpaper and put the damp spagnum moss in the bottom cover with seran |
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rookie
Registered: Posts: 384 |
I just rooted an alma cutting that had to be an inch thick if not bigger, i treated it the same way I do any other cutting, ,,, dip n grow , then into wrap in damp spagnum moss that has been wrung out wrapped in a paper towel then into a freezer bag then into a container with a grow lamp shining on it, more for heat than anything else , in 10 days the roots were growing through the paper towels. I used this method with about 15 other variety of cuttings that I got from a VERY generous forum member and every cutting except one looked like the trees from the movie "lord of the rings" as they walked on their roots. I haven't given up on the last cutting either, she's just being a tad stubborn. |
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pitangadiego
Registered: Posts: 5,447 |
A cutting is a cutting is a cutting. They all need the same conditions, just different size containers, etc. Size does not change the rooting process. |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
i'm rooting some really thick cuttings this winter.. but i'm seeing something i haven't before. it has what looks like white crumb all over the cutting. no they are not mold. it looks like when the root first come out, but there are so many of these that it's making mess everytime i'm check on the roots. |
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garden_whisperer
Registered: Posts: 1,613 |
flakey white stuff. i had that on cuttings i rooted in the areoponic mist system. i have had better luck with thickr cuttings. |
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jtp
Registered: Posts: 980 |
Thanks, everyone. I'm going to try several variations to see what works best for me. I appreciate the input. |
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saxonfig
Registered: Posts: 1,370 |
I've used plastic sweater boxes and sphagnum similar to what Al mentioned with great results. |
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omotm
Registered: Posts: 886 |
This post couldn't be more timely. I just received some rather thick (~1-2 inches) cuttings today and was wondering how to approach the rooting. I have my answers thanks to all of you. |
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pitangadiego
Registered: Posts: 5,447 |
It's a cutting, and you want it to grow roots. Size makes no difference. It's a cutting and you want it to grow roots. Same rule apply. |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,727 |
size matters not, young padawn. |
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twobrothersgarden
Registered: Posts: 332 |
My neighbor was cutting down his fig tree and I asked him if I could have some cuttings. He gave me as many as I would take. Then he said "here take this branch, you can grow a fig tree quicker with a bigger branch." |
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pitangadiego
Registered: Posts: 5,447 |
Sized doesn't matter. They root just like smaller cuttings. |
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Grasa
Registered: Posts: 1,819 |
honey and manure? Interesting! |
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barnhardt9999
Registered: Posts: 183 |
Can anyone share any insights on using honey. I tried it on a few BT and Celeste cuttigns very recently since its pretty standard practice with blueberries (the only plant before figs I have rooted). On the special cuttings I didn't use honey though. My thinking is honey would be a too acidic for figs but you never know until you try. I also had some fungus gnats on one cutting and honey seems to be a pretty good anti-fungal. |
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