| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Intentional sucker |
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Hoosierguy86
Registered: Posts: 246 |
Is it a best practice to pull a potential sucker off before potting a cutting or is it OK to leave it to form a sucker/new plant? The roots were only growing at the bottom of this cutting. There were none growing so that it could be split in two pieces. |
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GeneDaniels
Registered: Posts: 1,014 |
I've never done this with small cuttings, but with larger plants you wound the sucker's bark and then mound up soil around that wound and let it root for 6 weeks. Then remove it. Perhaps this would work with the cutting. It certainly cannot hurt. |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
i'm not sure what the exact definition of sucker is. but that one is just another branch coming off the cutting. normally, i leave them alone to see which one will grow faster. once i know which one will grow better and if there is no issue, i'll clip the other one to make single trunk tree form. |
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strudeldog
Registered: Posts: 747 |
Scott, |
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FrozenJoe
Registered: Posts: 1,115 |
Leave it. The more growth you can get out of that cutting the better. |
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Hoosierguy86
Registered: Posts: 246 |
Thank you for all the feedback. It is another bud from the cutting but I figured since it is under the soil it will potentially develop roots and function as a "sucker" |
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strudeldog
Registered: Posts: 747 |
Scott, |
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jdsfrance
Registered: Posts: 2,591 |
Hi Hoosierguy86, |
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