| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Half airlayering as a form of rooting cuttings |
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DevIsgro
Registered: Posts: 637 |
Hello everyone. I received a small Letizia airlayer from a generous member earlier this year that, because of the time in season, had not yet made a huge root mass like we often see on posts here. Having only one serious root and a few hair roots it dropped leaves right away. So I treated it like an unrooted cutting. Popped it in promix and monitored. After a few weeks it make 3 good roots and I put it in a 3/4 gallon Belden jumbo square (love those, big space savers) in promix and wrapped everything above the soil in grafting tape. Just today it started reopeming the tip bud and a side bud that will leaf out within the week. A wonderful success story. |
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ADelmanto
Registered: Posts: 911 |
Sometimes I take off air layers late in the season and notice that the leaves wilt right away. I just remove the leaves and any small roots and treat like a cutting. For me, this means wrapping in plastic wrap and sticking in the fridge till spring. Certainly worth a try to save it. |
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hoosierbanana
Registered: Posts: 2,186 |
You can actually cut an airlayer (that doesn't have enough roots) below the layer and set the cut end it in a glass of water to keep it from wilting. I accidentally chopped a tree that was growing and kept the top leaves on the green section happy like you would a cut flower and then got roots from wadding sphagnum moss and wrapping with plastic above the water line. When I read the title that is what this was about. |
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DevIsgro
Registered: Posts: 637 |
That's s novel idea Hoosier, thanks for sharing that. It seems like a decent way of extending the rooting time on an immature air layer. I apologize if my title was a bit confusing. |
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hoosierbanana
Registered: Posts: 2,186 |
No worries, there are no terms for this sort of thing. |
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