| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Rooting Cuttings - A Noobies First Attempt |
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TeddyB
Registered: Posts: 12 |
All,
Really appreciate it all, Theo |
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brettjm
Registered: Posts: 215 |
I am right there with you buddy. I've got a dozen cuttings in sphagnum in plastic bags hanging out in a heated chamber (72-78 degrees), along with some other cuttings that I'm trying to root in straight perlite. I'm about 6 or 7 days ahead of you, so hopefully whatever luck I've got, you'll see a week later (or sooner for all I care, as long as mine root too!) |
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TeddyB
Registered: Posts: 12 |
Glad to hear Im not the only one lol. I was a little unsure on the sphagnum moisture too, and now that you mention it, I may need to do the same thing. |
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Elfarach
Registered: Posts: 288 |
Good luck Theo... Try not to check on them to often, you'll make yourself go crazy, haha... |
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RichinNJ
Registered: Posts: 1,687 |
IMHO you could put them right into perlite and the humidity chamber at 80f. I don't do any cleaning or sterilization before I put them in. |
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brettjm
Registered: Posts: 215 |
[QUOTE=RichinNJ]IMHO you could put them right into perlite and the humidity chamber at 80f. I don't do any cleaning or sterilization before I put them in.[/QUOTE] |
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cis4elk
Registered: Posts: 1,719 |
Sounds like you should do fine. I keep a retired toothbrush around for giving my cuttings a scrub when they are in the bleach. |
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TeddyB
Registered: Posts: 12 |
I did take a look at your post on the other day and it looks like a great method. Thanks a bunch for posting that by the way, really cool. I think ill use your method on my next attempt. I have a few more cutting on the way. |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,727 |
I wouldn't do #1, either. Most people cut the top close to a node and the last thing you want to do is damage a node. Long fiber sphagnum moss has 2 drawbacks. The first is the wetness issue and the second is that the roots grow into it and trying to get them off breaks them. So when you put the roots in a pot and water the plant the sphagnum holds a lot of water next to the roots and can rot them. To avoid this take the cuttings out when the roots are short. Have you seen this page? It gives you the principles to follow. I use the alternative method linked to from there. I also score the bark at the bottom and use some clonex. |
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Ampersand
Registered: Posts: 728 |
My top rooting advice: don't overthink it or try too hard, the more you try it seems the more can go wrong. |
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tylerj
Registered: Posts: 646 |
I use a method similar to Rich's - 100% perlite in cups in a humidity bin sitting over a floor vent. It keeps the temps around 80. Personally I think using moss then putting cuttings with fragile roots in cups with perlite will lead to unnecessary failures. The less you disturb the cuttings and the initial roots they form the better. I like the cups because it allows the cutting to develop a nice strong root mass that is left alone until you are ready to pot them up. THE BIGGEST problem is too much moisture though. Even 100% perlite can be kept too wet. When I first put the cuttings in the cups I give them a good soaking and let all the excess water run out. You have to be careful of perlite with too much dust in it as it will stay too wet. I don't add any more water for at least a week and that's only if I see the cutting bark is dry under the perlite surface. The cups lets you see the moisture level with the condensation on the side. Its usually just the top half of the cup that dries out after a week so not much water is needed at all.. just enough to dampen that area. When the cuttings have rooted well and have started leafing out I slowly adapt them to the dryer room air over the course of a week. Once fully acclimated outside the humidity bin I put them under grow lights still in the cups. If the roots look strong enough at that point I pot them in 6" pots with (pre-dampened - not soaking) potting soil with added perlite. I enclose the pot with a nylon knee high stocking and use a twist tie to close it around the cutting. This keeps the gnats out. |
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joann1536
Registered: Posts: 274 |
Good luck, Theo! I'm rooting some now, too. You are about a week behind me. My only tips are things you've already heard: watch the moisture, and be careful not to break off those new roots. |
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