| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Anyone tried this? |
| Author | Comment |
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MariannaMiller
Registered: Posts: 261 |
Came across this article and wondered whether anyone has tried this? http://www.gardeningknowhow.com/garden-how-to/info/using-cinnamon-on-plants.htm |
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jtp
Registered: Posts: 980 |
Yes, cinnamon is great in the garden. Steep several tablespoons of cinnamon in a pint jar of rubbing alcohol, Strain and use as a spray on seedlings and cuttings. It kills bugs and stops fungi. I've also applied ground cinnamon to cuttings to stave off mold and rot. No idea if it helped with the rooting or not. But it certainly did not hurt. |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
heard about the use of cinnamon before, but never tried it. |
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nycfig
Registered: Posts: 886 |
Very cool! |
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GRamaley
Registered: Posts: 791 |
Very cool, wonder if you can use it to keep ants off trees, didn't have a problem this year but have had fire ants invade in the past.. |
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Chivas
Registered: Posts: 1,675 |
I will try this on some cuttings in the next couple weeks. |
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vitalucky
Registered: Posts: 241 |
Interesting. Thanks for posting and I will certainly try it |
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RichinNJ
Registered: Posts: 1,687 |
Ive used cinnamon on a couple rotten spots on a new orchid recently and it stopped it. |
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GregMartin
Registered: Posts: 550 |
I had a problem with dampening off fungus last year and cinnamon sprinkled on the soil surface seemed to really help. |
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lifigs
Registered: Posts: 217 |
Never heard of this. Will definitely have to give it try. Thanks. |
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MariannaMiller
Registered: Posts: 261 |
So far no dampening off or fungus gnats but I am sitting here with a quart bottle of cinnamon so guess its worth giving it a try if I do run into this. Also cinnamon is the main ingredient in snake deterrents so its not a bad thing to have around. Love my black snakes and rat snakes but some of the others are less enchanting. I hate being surprised when I am picking berries. |
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Aaron4USA
Registered: Posts: 2,969 |
Marianna, thank you so much for sharing this wonderful technique, I will start using Cinnamon for my plants from now on. |
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BexleyRabbit
Registered: Posts: 229 |
Have sprinkled cinnamon on the soil around my veg seedlings for two years now and it does work. Didn't know it could help rooting though, thanks. |
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jtp
Registered: Posts: 980 |
As for ants, try sprinkling fresh ground coffee on the ant hills. They love the stuff and take in back into the nest. Not sure how if affects them, but they are soon gone after doing this. |
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BronxFigs
Registered: Posts: 1,864 |
Thank you for the link to the informative article. Very interesting uses for cinnamon. |
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GeneDaniels
Registered: Posts: 1,014 |
Thanks for posting. I just tried it on two cuttings that were showing very slight signs of mold. I'll let you know how well it works. |
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potatochips101
Registered: Posts: 113 |
I read online that cinnamon, plain old drugstore bought hydrogen peroxide, and peppermint tea are good for combating funus gnats that's what made me try it. I had apparently brought two gnats along with my mango tree in the house from the cold. |
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Scarecrow_Sun_God
Registered: Posts: 59 |
Thanks for the information, does this help with soil nematodes as well? |
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MariannaMiller
Registered: Posts: 261 |
John, |
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Tonycm
Registered: Posts: 922 |
Isn't rust a fungus? If so then spraying fig trees with the cinnamon mixture might help with stopping or slowing down the spread of rust. It could be worth a try. |
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Aaron4USA
Registered: Posts: 2,969 |
I am ecstatic about Marianna's advise on Cinnamon, i shook some on lower ends of my cuttings as I took 'em out of the fridge and wrapped them in wet paper towel and dropped them in zip=lock to root. I was thinking well...2 good weeks before I see some white growth here and there. Well, it's the 5th day now and guess what! I count 7 figlets and roots up and down the cuttings. I'm going crazy laughing at it, LOL I'm going to post a pic soon with new Post saying Cinnamon on it. |
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armando93223
Registered: Posts: 1,164 |
Will be looking into using cinnamon to battle gnats and pest.....I have been spraying a mix of dish soap on top of the soil, thinking it may kill some larvae...???? Thanks For Posting this Topic. |
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MariannaMiller
Registered: Posts: 261 |
Armando, I tried the dryer sheet method of controlling gnats. On the premise that soil stored in the carport was likely to be infected with our local bugs, I put a couple of sheets along the edge of a couple of my pots in my humidity chamber. Had some slow rooting varieties going and it seemed to work. Its something else you might try. |
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Ong888
Registered: Posts: 140 |
Very good info, I'll try it tomorrow..... Thanks Regards, Ong Jakarta, Indonesia |
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Aaron4USA
Registered: Posts: 2,969 |
I treated my cuttings for rooting with Cinnamon, this is 5 days later |
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Chivas
Registered: Posts: 1,675 |
I didn't get as much of a coating as you, I grated my fresh and had a light coating, still looks positive, we will see if they root or not. |
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MariannaMiller
Registered: Posts: 261 |
Chivas, it will be interesting to see if you get as fast results as Aaron did...although I suspect the variety of cutting may something to do with rooting speed. Please let us know how it works for you. |
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Aaron4USA
Registered: Posts: 2,969 |
I am worried about the growth above going faster than the rooting itself, look at those figlets popping up everywhere, such a shame. I also injected fresh mix of Cinnamon water into my Apple Air layerings, lets see what happens. :x |
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Aaron4USA
Registered: Posts: 2,969 |
this was last night, I found out that tops are growing faster then rooting process, so, I washed the old Cinnamon away and re sprinkled Cinnamon only on the half of the group and re-wrapped them in new wet paper towels and zip-locked them... lets see which group does better. |
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Dave
Registered: Posts: 1,482 |
[video]http://youtu.be/p_KHDDAPn_o[/video] |
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timmy2green
Registered: Posts: 196 |
I'm definitely going to experiment with this with some cuttings in Jon's Uline bag method. |
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GregMartin
Registered: Posts: 550 |
fungus gnat adults are annoying, but their larvae are a problem. They will eat plant roots. |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
timmy2green, fungus gnats are a huge problem. You see one, it could already be too late. You definitely need to proactivly protect your indoor plants (including all growing fig cuttings) with BT. If you water, make sure you do it with BT. |
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Aaron4USA
Registered: Posts: 2,969 |
Suzi, for snakes... hang bunch of garlic in corners of your property, 8 inches above ground. thats what we used to do in Cyprus. they never come into your property, i think they really hate the smell |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
Aaron, that could be difficult. 1.5 acres with various corners, and huge boulders with cracks where the snakes hide, not to mention all the gopher/vole holes and tunnels where they also hide. How do you determine a corner? I'm cool with the garlic. I plant every clove with a green shoot. |
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Aaron4USA
Registered: Posts: 2,969 |
lucky you... i'm sitting only on 14,800 sf lot including the house ;/ |
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greenfig
Registered: Posts: 3,182 |
So, if you water the recently planted rooted cuttings with some cinnamon water , will you get the leaves sooner? |
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timmy2green
Registered: Posts: 196 |
Suzi, I know you're not advising to water my plants with Brown Turkey, hehe, but what is BT? I may not be able to fix my embarrassment when I hear the obvious answer to this, but hopefully I can at least fix those dang gnats. Time to go to war! |
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timmy2green
Registered: Posts: 196 |
By the way, I had a moldy cutting last night and I cut off the top moldy part, ran under water and rolled in cinnamon and rebagged in same soil mix. Let's see what happens! I'll post pics as soon as I can get them off my wife's phone. |
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GeneDaniels
Registered: Posts: 1,014 |
Out of several baggies of cuttings, I had 3-4 that were getting mold. Then I read this post and rubbed them all with Cinnamon. That was 2 weeks ago and I've not had any mold since. This seems to stop mold in its tracts! |
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Aaron4USA
Registered: Posts: 2,969 |
Gene, you are right, Cinnamon=MoldBeGone :) |
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greenfig
Registered: Posts: 3,182 |
[QUOTE=Aaron4USA]... |
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eboone
Registered: Posts: 1,101 |
timmy2green - BT is a commonly used organic pesticide, short for Bacillus thuringiensis, which is a bacteria that gets ingested by various worms, grubs, larvae, caterpillars and kills them by a natural chemical it produces inside their guts. |
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Chivas
Registered: Posts: 1,675 |
Usually as a home gardener you can buy BTK for worms and fungus gnats. In the us you can buy Monterrey Garden Spray which has spinosad in it (also made from a naturally occurring soil fungus but this formulation is not done organically) I haven't tried it on fungus gnats but it kills loopers and thrips (depends on if the thrips are resistant or not). Check the label on the BT if it will control fungus gnats, some sub species are better than others, in the greenhouse we use Vectobac instead of Bioprotect (loopers) even though they are both bacillus thuringiensis, they are different sub species and have a bit more effectiveness on different pests. |
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Aaron4USA
Registered: Posts: 2,969 |
[QUOTE=greenfig][QUOTE=Aaron4USA]... |
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ascpete
Registered: Posts: 1,942 |
Marianna, |
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timmy2green
Registered: Posts: 196 |
Greenfig, I was thinking the same thing of using it to produce growth where i have potted cuttings with roots but no top growth at all. |
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EDoukas
Registered: Posts: 49 |
Wow, great tip for rooting. I knew honey was a good one, but never heard of cinnamon for it. Just be aware though that the cinnamon usually sold in the US is not true cinnamon but is actually Cassia. They are different from each other. There are measures you can take to get true cinnamon (which works better on ants I've heard than cassia). BTW, most cinnamon STICKS are still usually cassia! You can look up the pictures to see the comparisons. Then again, cassia is related and has similar properties. Maybe these recommendations were unknowingly made while implementing cassia anyway! |
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ascpete
Registered: Posts: 1,942 |
Timothy, |
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timmy2green
Registered: Posts: 196 |
Thanks Pete. |
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