| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Is there an optimum humidity for rooting cuttings? |
| Author | Comment |
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alan7s
Registered: Posts: 55 |
From the posts, it sounds like people are doing OK with quite a range of humidity |
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striveforfreedom
Registered: Posts: 437 |
Not sure it there's an exact number to shoot for John but in our home it is 10% moisture this time of year. |
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alan7s
Registered: Posts: 55 |
Thanks Vince, that's helpful. I put a hygrometer in the tent and it reads 95% |
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pitangadiego
Registered: Posts: 5,447 |
if you have sufficient air volume, and change the air often enough, probably 60-70% is good. 10% is awful dry. |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,727 |
The good thing about Jon's new bag method is that you don't need a humidity tent and so as the buds break they do so in to room air and don't need a transitional adaptation period. It's that transitional period where a lot of people lose cuttings. |
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striveforfreedom
Registered: Posts: 437 |
We go through a lot of Chapstick this time of year. John I'd drop that % down also as 95% may be inviting mold. |
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alan7s
Registered: Posts: 55 |
OK thanks, I'll try for the 60 - 70% but it seems to me your numbers must be right up |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,727 |
You have plastic covering the whole group of baggies. If you let that stay as leaves grow in to it the stomatae will not develop the strength needed to close. If you take off the plastic covering the group of bags and leave it off you risk the leaves drying out because the stomatae can't close. So you have to either mist the leaves as they transition from high to low humidity or leave the bag off for increasing times but replace it so the leaves don't dry out. That's how you transition them. If you never have plastic covering the baggies that will not be an issue. |
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strudeldog
Registered: Posts: 747 |
Bob, |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,727 |
Stoma is the pore or opening. Stomata is a complex consisting of the pore and the guard cells around it that open and close it. Plural of the Greek, "stomata" may be "stomatae". There are many on most land plant leaves so I use the plural. However some words are plural and singular. So Stomatae may be incorrect and stomata may refer to one or many. I'm just doing my best. :) |
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ascpete
Registered: Posts: 1,942 |
John, |
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alan7s
Registered: Posts: 55 |
Pete; Yes, very helpful as mine is reading 85% and wasn't sure if mold would |
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ascpete
Registered: Posts: 1,942 |
I typically cup when roots are visible (1/4 inch) and the bottom end has started to callus. These cuttings are actually part of a test. They had been in an unheated room (45-65 deg F) for 2 months in Sphagnum Moss, I placed them in the 75-80 deg F. rooting cabinet 9 days ago, They had not grown mold in that entire time. |
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