I just love to watch all your garden videos! You and Allie and your beautiful gardens are just so calming and peaceful to me. I like all your garden projects and look forward to seeing. The garden grow this year. Thank you for sharing your garden with me. 💖😊🌸🌼🐝🦋🌻🕊👍👋
Awww ☺️🤗 That’s honestly sooo sweet of you Beatrice. Thank you so much. You made my day already. ✨🥰 The garden truly has a calming and very tranquil quality. So welcome in these days. Wishing you a cosy and lovely weekend my dear 🙋🏻♂️ Daniel
Hi Hi 👋🏼 I’m the pots I honestly had zero luck. I took some cuttings and put them horizontal directly in the soil and three out of five took root. I guess it was due to putting them horizontal on the ground or it was pure luck. Still in the aftermath: I think it’s way easier growing them from seed.
@@balticgardening4002 Thank you very much for sharing!:) I asked because my aquilegia didn't survive after I moved it. Then I read that they don't like to be disturbed. I started to search for how to propagate them, and the only two methods I found were by seeds and basal cuttings. Then I came across your video but decided to ask if it really works. Thank you again for your honesty.
@@nvb888 How interesting. I move Aquilegia a lot and always with great success. I always transplant them in Spring. (I even lifted them in bloom two years ago 🫣 Shame on me!) Even those survived. But propagation is definitely best done by seed 🤍💜 Wishing you a lovely week 🙋🏻♂️
@@balticgardening4002 I moved mine in the fall when it was dormant, and I guess it was a mistake:) It is good to know that you can actually move them. Have a wonderful week you too!:)
That is so nice to hear 🤗 Thank you so much Margarida ☺️ Fingers crossed that the root cuttings will thrive. That would simply be amazing ✨ Wishing you a wonderful weekend 🙋🏻♂️ Daniel
Hi! I have a lot new small aquilegias every year. I just relocate them to better places. I have a question: what kind of thuja do you have behind you in first minutes of video?
Hi Joanna 👋🏼 The thuja sweet already here when I came. I honestly don’t know the variety but it’s quite patchy and has holes towards the bottom 🙈 The once at the garage are worst. Do you plan on planting some?
@@joannade.2511 I know that they are controversial. They grow rather fast, which is nice. Pruning is what I’m not so du d of cause you need to be careful not to cut into the brown dried off parts 😬🙈
I just love to watch all your garden videos! You and Allie and your beautiful gardens are just so calming and peaceful to me. I like all your garden projects and look forward to seeing. The garden grow this year. Thank you for sharing your garden with me. 💖😊🌸🌼🐝🦋🌻🕊👍👋
Awww ☺️🤗 That’s honestly sooo sweet of you Beatrice. Thank you so much. You made my day already. ✨🥰 The garden truly has a calming and very tranquil quality. So welcome in these days. Wishing you a cosy and lovely weekend my dear 🙋🏻♂️ Daniel
I am wondering if you have any results? You are the only one who says that it can be done:)
Hi Hi 👋🏼 I’m the pots I honestly had zero luck. I took some cuttings and put them horizontal directly in the soil and three out of five took root. I guess it was due to putting them horizontal on the ground or it was pure luck. Still in the aftermath: I think it’s way easier growing them from seed.
@@balticgardening4002 Thank you very much for sharing!:) I asked because my aquilegia didn't survive after I moved it. Then I read that they don't like to be disturbed. I started to search for how to propagate them, and the only two methods I found were by seeds and basal cuttings. Then I came across your video but decided to ask if it really works. Thank you again for your honesty.
@@nvb888 How interesting. I move Aquilegia a lot and always with great success. I always transplant them in Spring. (I even lifted them in bloom two years ago 🫣 Shame on me!) Even those survived. But propagation is definitely best done by seed 🤍💜 Wishing you a lovely week 🙋🏻♂️
@@balticgardening4002 I moved mine in the fall when it was dormant, and I guess it was a mistake:) It is good to know that you can actually move them.
Have a wonderful week you too!:)
Truely a serendipity!!!😍
always happy for a lucky coincidence 🙌🏼☀️ Have a cosy weekend 🙋🏻♂️
@@balticgardening4002 thanks a lot… you too…
💖ALFIE is so cute!💖
She says ‘THANK YOU’ 🥰☀️ She’s in her woolly bear looking stage again 🤗
Is there update about these roots? first time see this method, very curious. Thank you very much!
Execelent video
Thank you so much 😊 always so kind of you 🤗✨ Have a nice start into your weekend
Always learning😊
That is so nice to hear 🤗 Thank you so much Margarida ☺️ Fingers crossed that the root cuttings will thrive. That would simply be amazing ✨ Wishing you a wonderful weekend 🙋🏻♂️ Daniel
Hi! I have a lot new small aquilegias every year. I just relocate them to better places. I have a question: what kind of thuja do you have behind you in first minutes of video?
Hi Joanna 👋🏼 The thuja sweet already here when I came. I honestly don’t know the variety but it’s quite patchy and has holes towards the bottom 🙈 The once at the garage are worst. Do you plan on planting some?
@@balticgardening4002 yes I do. I know they are controversial but I like them. Especially the one like yours 😁
@@joannade.2511 I know that they are controversial. They grow rather fast, which is nice. Pruning is what I’m not so du d of cause you need to be careful not to cut into the brown dried off parts 😬🙈
Poor worm 😆
😂🙈 Hope you have a wonderful Friday Clair