@chuckbailey6835 Aspirin, also known as acetylsalicylic acid (ASA), is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) used to reduce pain, fever, and/or inflammation, and as an antithrombotic. I'm using aspirin as a generic form of a pain reliever. Thank for your assistance.
yes, I understand that the colonists learned about willow bark tea for pain relief from the 'Indians', Native American or First Nations people here in New England. Saliceae, the willow tree family, from which comes acetyl salicylic acid, the main ingredient of aspirin.
Careful with Honey in warm water, around 40° some enzymes and other goodies start to break down. Honey also has antibacterial properties (if you don't cook them away). Cinnamon also has antifungal properties, so both help indirectly in keeping the vurnable cutting safe. Hydrogen Peroxide for example *only* desinfects and doesn't directly help in rooting, because unlike cinnamon it does not contain any rooting hormone.
Thanks for the video, it was interesting. I'd be curious to see if combining some of the natural things would give something equally effective to the synthetic rooting hormone. It looked like you only used the gel of the aloe vera plant, and I think many of it's beneficial qualities are in the skin. I think it might work better if you put the whole piece in a blender with water, and let it soak for a few hours after blending or heat in crock pot. Then, you can strain it and get out any of the water soluble stuff in the skin. With the honey, I know you said it was raw, but it did not look unfiltered. Much honey that is advertised as raw has been processed, the honey should be opaque and solid at room temperature; and from a local source you trust to know it's the real unadulterated deal.
Very informative video thank you as I have done a lot of experimenting with almost all you presented in video except willow bark which I did not try yet but again thank you for putting this video together
Wow, I am impressed by the cinnamon and will certainly try it! My only experience so far is with willow cuttings, leaves and all (chopped up and steeped in hot water, then diluted for watering), and those were excellent as well. I managed to save a few trees the city decided to plant during the hottest time of summer. They already had lost all leaves despite copious watering efforts, but after some willow tea each they got new leaves in early autumn and I think hey will have survived the winter as well. I will definitely try the cinnamon on my bell pepper though, which decided to survive until now, but having a bit of back-up with am early start doesn't hurt for sure.
@@jsmith3980 fresh willow twigs, leaves and all, cut into small pieces, hot water until fully submerged, let step until cool. Use: 1/10 of watering water
id like some pro grade % .25 iba. but the best i find in stores is .003% like cloneX. usually my first choice. the powdered is only .001% iba. buying mostly talc or gel lol
Thank you so much. I have really been having a hard time. I’ve talked to the people in the office where I live in these apartments someone’s been coming up on my porch and breaking off lambs from my beautiful baby orange bougainvillea plant and honestly, I just did not know what to do. I didn’t know if they would root in water or what so I did go ahead and put them in water and I lost both of them both of the pieces that were broken off, even though they were very green and healthy and had just bloomed beautiful little tiny flowers, I don’t know what happened so the only thing I can do now is wait and see if the plant will continue to grow stems and take it from there. Of course I had to seek out on here to find out what I was doing wrong with the pieces that broke off, but I think it had more to do with the fact that whoever came up on the porch and broke it, must’ve just like ripped it down and broke it off either way I put a ring camera up because I’m getting kind of tired of it. It hasn’t even been six months since they walked right up on my porch and stole two Boston ferns one of my neighbors gave me some, pathos cuttings or ivy cutting people call them different things at the time. I did not have a grow light so I set them on my kitchen stove that light and they rooted beautifully. Thank you so much for all your help.
@@BlackheartSky17 You might be able to do that if your conditions are just right, but you will get better results with using aspirin on the stem, because cinnamon combats fungus and some fungi in the soil helps plants grow better.
There's a difference between a rooting hormone and a root stimulant. Honey, cinnamon, and aloe are not rooting hormones, nor do they contain rooting hormone. Each of them have properties that can promote root health and growth. They can also protect from bacteria etc. The aspirin does contain synthetic Salicylic acid which is a hormone which plants (willow) does produce.
Thank you my comments are appreciation for the information, Not to argue. I already used the root powder before I found your video.. can I throw some cinnamon in the water for added help. I'm trying to root Rosa a Sharon again. Thanks help much appreciated
with willow its best to dig up some willow root , works much better , branches don't work as well ,, it works better than the powder or clonex ,, i dig down to aroot and get the smaller roots growing off main root ,
I have an eery feeling that blackberry branches and leaves might work as well if you grind them down, wild blackberry roots like crazy it just has to touch the ground, this plant must have a ton of rooting hormones due to having this aggressive behavior!
Thank you for sharing! I have been trying to grow roots from guava stem clippings using commercial rooting hormones by RootBoost, cinnamon, and aloe vera, and none of them worked! HELP!
When you used honey I wonder where you got the honey. If you obtained it at the supermarket it's likely not pure honey. Actual honey may give different results.
Thanks for pointing this out. I watched again in the video, and the honey did not have the creamy look of unfiltered. I would give this experiment another try with honey I knew was raw and unfiltered.
Usually you need to order a grow light with a light spectrum that matches sun light. Most box store lights don't have the spectrum plants need to grow. Sprouting with shop lights works and without the right spectrum you will get spindly plants.
I just watched a video from IV Organics and that guy said the some university did a study using the powdered rooting powder with cinnamon and that worked better than either one by itself, I don't remember now if that is on every type cutting or just certain ones, here is the video: How To Root Cuttings | Honey vs. Cinnamon vs. CloneX | THE RESULTS ARE IN th-cam.com/video/h380AelfxNI/w-d-xo.htmlsi=oS_vcg2UDbpZfsVO
No comment. I'm just feeding the algorithm monster and tapping the thumbs 👍 button.
I've tried honey, cinammon, aloe and also turmeric, What worked is soluble dispirin (aspirin).
the others didn't work? have u tried them on rose cuttings?
Thank you for the comparison to show us what works and how well!
Aspirin is the active ingredient in willow. Willow is natural pain reliever.
@chuckbailey6835 Aspirin, also known as acetylsalicylic acid (ASA), is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) used to reduce pain, fever, and/or inflammation, and as an antithrombotic. I'm using aspirin as a generic form of a pain reliever. Thank for your assistance.
yes, I understand that the colonists learned about willow bark tea for pain relief from the 'Indians', Native American or First Nations people here in New England. Saliceae, the willow tree family, from which comes acetyl salicylic acid, the main ingredient of aspirin.
Superb! Thank you for sharing this informative video. Greetings from Madang, Papua New Guinea!
So, I have heard to use honey and aloe and that works pretty well.
I've read that they do absolutely nothing.
Dip n' Grow and an aeroponic system has given me roots on peppers and tomatoes in 3 days. (With CO2 enrichment)
very useful comparisons. i've watched other videos - it seems cinnamon does best indeed honey should be used pure and raw, just as a dip.
Thanks for watching!
It is easier to just put the aloe leaf in the blender, and that also is a life-saver for burns, literally.
Careful with Honey in warm water, around 40° some enzymes and other goodies start to break down.
Honey also has antibacterial properties (if you don't cook them away).
Cinnamon also has antifungal properties, so both help indirectly in keeping the vurnable cutting safe.
Hydrogen Peroxide for example *only* desinfects and doesn't directly help in rooting, because unlike cinnamon it does not contain any rooting hormone.
have u tried them on rose cuttings?
Thanks for the video, it was interesting. I'd be curious to see if combining some of the natural things would give something equally effective to the synthetic rooting hormone.
It looked like you only used the gel of the aloe vera plant, and I think many of it's beneficial qualities are in the skin. I think it might work better if you put the whole piece in a blender with water, and let it soak for a few hours after blending or heat in crock pot. Then, you can strain it and get out any of the water soluble stuff in the skin.
With the honey, I know you said it was raw, but it did not look unfiltered. Much honey that is advertised as raw has been processed, the honey should be opaque and solid at room temperature; and from a local source you trust to know it's the real unadulterated deal.
Very informative video thank you as I have done a lot of experimenting with almost all you presented in video except willow bark which I did not try yet but again thank you for putting this video together
Glad it was helpful!
Wow, I am impressed by the cinnamon and will certainly try it! My only experience so far is with willow cuttings, leaves and all (chopped up and steeped in hot water, then diluted for watering), and those were excellent as well. I managed to save a few trees the city decided to plant during the hottest time of summer. They already had lost all leaves despite copious watering efforts, but after some willow tea each they got new leaves in early autumn and I think hey will have survived the winter as well. I will definitely try the cinnamon on my bell pepper though, which decided to survive until now, but having a bit of back-up with am early start doesn't hurt for sure.
Cheers and good luck in your garden.
How did you make the willow tea? Thanks.
@@jsmith3980 fresh willow twigs, leaves and all, cut into small pieces, hot water until fully submerged, let step until cool. Use: 1/10 of watering water
id like some pro grade % .25 iba. but the best i find in stores is .003% like cloneX. usually my first choice. the powdered is only .001% iba. buying mostly talc or gel lol
Hmm!🤔 My Hormex rooting hormone kit comes in 3 different strengths: 0.1%, 0.3% and 0.8% IBA.
i find your explanation very credible.
Thank you so much. I have really been having a hard time. I’ve talked to the people in the office where I live in these apartments someone’s been coming up on my porch and breaking off lambs from my beautiful baby orange bougainvillea plant and honestly, I just did not know what to do. I didn’t know if they would root in water or what so I did go ahead and put them in water and I lost both of them both of the pieces that were broken off, even though they were very green and healthy and had just bloomed beautiful little tiny flowers, I don’t know what happened so the only thing I can do now is wait and see if the plant will continue to grow stems and take it from there. Of course I had to seek out on here to find out what I was doing wrong with the pieces that broke off, but I think it had more to do with the fact that whoever came up on the porch and broke it, must’ve just like ripped it down and broke it off either way I put a ring camera up because I’m getting kind of tired of it. It hasn’t even been six months since they walked right up on my porch and stole two Boston ferns one of my neighbors gave me some, pathos cuttings or ivy cutting people call them different things at the time. I did not have a grow light so I set them on my kitchen stove that light and they rooted beautifully. Thank you so much for all your help.
Cinnamon and honey is only a anti fungal not a rooting hormone 😊
That is why you should use aspirin along with them. I also sprinkle cinnamon on the top of the soil when starting seedlings and cuttings.
Wait... So I can't do what he did with the cinnamon?
@@BlackheartSky17 You might be able to do that if your conditions are just right, but you will get better results with using aspirin on the stem, because cinnamon combats fungus and some fungi in the soil helps plants grow better.
Yes it is
Well, he showed you the results. It looked like it worked according to the results he got
How did the aspirin do?
There's a difference between a rooting hormone and a root stimulant. Honey, cinnamon, and aloe are not rooting hormones, nor do they contain rooting hormone. Each of them have properties that can promote root health and growth. They can also protect from bacteria etc. The aspirin does contain synthetic Salicylic acid which is a hormone which plants (willow) does produce.
How about, if I dip it in honey then in cinnamon
Great video thank you. I'm doing the cinnamon one as that's what I have.
Thanks for the tip
No problem! Happy gardening
Thank you my comments are appreciation for the information, Not to argue. I already used the root powder before I found your video.. can I throw some cinnamon in the water for added help. I'm trying to root Rosa a Sharon again. Thanks help much appreciated
well done, I learn a lot thank you so much for sharing your experiments!
Your bonsai look lovely. Thanks bro
Thanks…it’s a great hobby.
Thank you for this detailed informative video.
Glad it was helpful!
Great info. Going to try the cinnamon.
Great information to know! Thank you so much it will help me a lot!
So glad!
What was the asprin result?
Thank you. I will do the cinnamon. I do not have access to the synthetic one where I am at
After using cinnamon, all my cutting have rooted and grown now. Thanks
thank you
with willow its best to dig up some willow root , works much better , branches don't work as well ,, it works better than the powder or clonex ,, i dig down to aroot and get the smaller roots growing off main root ,
Thanks for the tip!
hi. have u tried cinnamon on rose cuttings?
and with honey, do you have to change water every 3-4 days?
Love your bonsais.
Thank you!
tanks for the info!👍
Tomato cuttings needs nothing it is the easiest cutting to root on the planet
indeed.. a better test would be a woody shrub or something.
@@esobofhor cannabis
I have an eery feeling that blackberry branches and leaves might work as well if you grind them down, wild blackberry roots like crazy it just has to touch the ground, this plant must have a ton of rooting hormones due to having this aggressive behavior!
Thank you for sharing! I have been trying to grow roots from guava stem clippings using commercial rooting hormones by RootBoost, cinnamon, and aloe vera, and none of them worked! HELP!
Should we put our cuttings in water first or can we plant them directly un soil ?
Either way
Any thoughts on the commercial product Takeroot rooting hormone is that safe?
I’d like to see what would happen if you mixed them all!
Have you ever heard of Jack and the beanstalk? 😂
What about the aspirin
aspirin results?
You mentioned your "garden blender." Do you have a garden "spoon" for that aloe? j/k Keep growing king!
The wife doesn’t want me using her “good” kitchen stuff.
Willow Bark and Honey...
When you used honey I wonder where you got the honey. If you obtained it at the supermarket it's likely not pure honey. Actual honey may give different results.
Molasses, that's what should be used. Unsulphured raw molasses
Thanks for pointing this out. I watched again in the video, and the honey did not have the creamy look of unfiltered. I would give this experiment another try with honey I knew was raw and unfiltered.
which method has the most roots?
A lot of variables.
Usually you need to order a grow light with a light spectrum that matches sun light. Most box store lights don't have the spectrum plants need to grow. Sprouting with shop lights works and without the right spectrum you will get spindly plants.
Full spectrum bulbs/diodes. LED's, fluorescent T-5/T-8/T-12.
this is for those that would know, what happens if you use ALL OF THESE blended in a blender?
Ever read Jack and the beanstalk? 😂
Can you use ibuprofen instead of aspirin?
Probably not; it's not the same chemical at all. Wouldn't hurt to try... ;-)
aspirin is derived from willow bark, ibuprofen is not.. Some folks use willow as the growth stimulant
aloe vera is all you need
Dank tomatoes
The trouble with using tomato plants for these demonstrations is that its cuttings root so easily - even without hormone.
Anything works with a tomato. I legit just take cuttings and poke them into the ground....
Its about getting more effectiv
Cidr vinegsrthf ph level must b crazy
Hydrogen peroxide is a speedy inexpensive helper to root fast
Any one try hydrogen peroxide?
did you?
@@sven-en2fd ya it did not kill cuttings of a ficus. But they have not rooted yet only been 7 days
gud1
So ------- What happened using aspirin?????????? Why did you omit it???????
It's not synthetic
Grower turned TH-camr.
UNSUBCRIBED 🖐
😭
It's one of the best videos on the subject. ❤ Tons of information, and not overly wordy, thanks. I SUBSCRIBED!
just unsubscribe qe don't need to hear about it. you're not special
@@ZenGardenOasis.I subscribed to your channel 😊
As long as his info is helpful, why do you care if he becomes a youtuber? Actually, he reaches more people. It is good
I just watched a video from IV Organics and that guy said the some university did a study using the powdered rooting powder with cinnamon and that worked better than either one by itself, I don't remember now if that is on every type cutting or just certain ones, here is the video: How To Root Cuttings | Honey vs. Cinnamon vs. CloneX | THE RESULTS ARE IN
th-cam.com/video/h380AelfxNI/w-d-xo.htmlsi=oS_vcg2UDbpZfsVO
thank you