Thank you guys..this video brought back memories of my grandpa who passed away in 2004. This is something that me and him would have tried definitely. 🌞🔥💯💯
Thanks for sharing your video on the method of air layering in plants. I find it very inspiring. After watching your video, I thought of a point that might get some attention at the end of your video. Personally, I think you should keep the new air-stratified cutting in a shady spot for the first few weeks after separating from the parent and plant it on its own root system to grow. You could also take some leaves from it, so that the roots are not burdened too much. There is always a balance between the ability of the roots to absorb water from the soil and the leaves that evaporate water. After a few weeks in the shade, new growth may appear and then you can move the plant to a more sunny spot. The leaves remove CO2 from the air, in combination with water and sunlight photosynthesis occurs, this process produces plant sugars that keep the rest of the plant and roots healthy and allow them to grow. That is my experience after a few years of successful air layering of my plants. I wish you succes with your plants. Greeting, Marcel, from the Netherlands.
Perhaps an explanation to understand why you partially remove the bark at the bottom of the new cutting using the air layer method. The plant needs two sap streams to survive. The roots provide the plant with water and minerals/nutrients from the soil. These sap streams pass through the core via the wood vessels in the plant to the leaves. In the leaves photosynthesis takes place under the influence of sunlight/daylight, CO2 is absorbed from the air and converted into plant sugars. These plant sugars are moved by the plant sap flows along the green cambium layer under the bark and return to the roots of the plant. This allows the roots to grow, stay healthy and continue to provide the plant with water. By interrupting the bark in a ring around the branch, the back-flowing sap flows are interrupted. The plant sugars therefore remain in the top cuttings of the plant. ____ This encourages the cuttings to form new roots. Meanwhile, the cutting remains nourished and supplied with water from the roots of the mother plant. Because the cutting has formed sufficient roots of its own, it can be separated from the mother plant to continue growing independently as a new clone with the same properties as the mother plant. Because the cuttings are no longer fed by the sap flows from the mother plant, the new root balls on the cuttings must fully nourish the cuttings. By reducing the evaporation of water by the leaves on the cutting (this can be done by pruning the cutting back, but also by removing part of the leaf on the cutting), restoring the balance between water uptake via the roots and evaporation/water consumption through the leaf helps to recover the new cutting better and the cutting remains more vital. As the roots of the newly formed plant develop more, the plant will show more new growth, so more new leaves.
Wow !! Thanks so much for showing this method !👍🏾 Never seen before . Very interesting. You are very clever !👏🏾👏🏾👌🏾😊 I'll probably try this at some point when I go back to Jamaica !😀
Hi sir your 💡idea is very good👍 and the way showing video also very nice👏 bcz first to end you covered nicely thank you🙏 for smart work it's useful to many people
The only thing I don’t like about air layering is both sides of the skinned area grow roots, which leaves a chunk of stock and roots to die in the pot. But it works pretty good for rooting
While its a pretty neat idea...the only downside I see is that you have to water it often for root growth to occur...this can be a challenge for those that are engaged in daily work...I would go so far as using the lid of the coupon something similar to cover and seal the top to eliminate evaporation. Another thing, respectfully... please answer the questions of which season did you do it etc etc as these questions are very important for the success of the process. Also..I would think you should wrap the container with say a black plastic to ensure successful root growth... hope these constructive observations receives your favorable attention.Thank you.
Nice suggetions, I watched those in other video's about plant air-layering. Me myself mixed some mosses throug the ground wich I used to air-layering cuttings, made it very wet and closed the bucket for about 6 weeks. Never water it in mean time and it works ( in the Netherlands, not very hot weathers here), this is because the cutting will get its water from the root system of the motherplant, also the new to grow roots are primarie small so the won't take much water at first side. I myself use a container with a lid clicked on, fitting holes just below the lid through which the branch is surrounded with moist soil-moss mix. I remove the bark in a narrow ring around the branch, and fix the container with the removed ring of bark approximately at the bottom or in the middle of the container. In the first few weeks, scar tissue will form along the edge of the removed bark. The new roots will partly develop from this. It functions best from early spring when sap flows in the plant are starting and new growth develops, until late summer so that the cutting is rooted before sap flows decline and the plant rests in winter. As soon as the growth stops, the success of good root formation on the cutting will decrease. In winter and early spring, pruning material from the plant can be used to root directly into the ground. Best about 2/3 underground and inclined, almost lying, helps the sap flows of the newly developed roots to start more easily. Keep it in shade first moths, until much roots has growned, next it might get more sunny spot for faster devoleping and more grow. Succes. Greeting, Marcel (from the Netherlands).
When you water the tree the water will feed the branches. ALL branches even the branch that is air layered and the water and nutrients will go to the grafted branch and roots will come out from granted branch. It's like an umbilical cord feeding the baby as the mother eats until the baby is cut off from the umbilical cord and it's on its own. 👶🌳
*Awesome* 😍👍, *We are doing lemon farming for 50 years* 😍🍋
Which state are you from?
@@simratlamberdar5556 thanks buddy
I did this procedure on my guava tree too and the results were amazing. Excited for the fruits of your lemon tree.
th-cam.com/video/qIxa9jYAlsI/w-d-xo.html
Good
Thank you guys..this video brought back memories of my grandpa who passed away in 2004. This is something that me and him would have tried definitely. 🌞🔥💯💯
L
@@OmPrakash-jq8ix ??
It's nice to watch video.. please sharing more..
Very educative information about plants. Good job👍👍
I got a seedless lemon tree and I was planning to do air layering on that. Thank you for the transparent glass idea.
I am also having same plant
I don't have a lemon tree but I enjoyed this unique process. Watching from Cambodia.
That wasn't a lemon tree
You can do it for any family of citrus 🍊
Ĺ
Nice and interesting useful video for new gardeners. 👌
🥰🥰😍😍
@@nysokhom6213
Is there a follow-up video? I couldn't find it. Thank you for sharing.
Thanks for sharing your video on the method of air layering in plants. I find it very inspiring. After watching your video, I thought of a point that might get some attention at the end of your video. Personally, I think you should keep the new air-stratified cutting in a shady spot for the first few weeks after separating from the parent and plant it on its own root system to grow. You could also take some leaves from it, so that the roots are not burdened too much. There is always a balance between the ability of the roots to absorb water from the soil and the leaves that evaporate water. After a few weeks in the shade, new growth may appear and then you can move the plant to a more sunny spot. The leaves remove CO2 from the air, in combination with water and sunlight photosynthesis occurs, this process produces plant sugars that keep the rest of the plant and roots healthy and allow them to grow. That is my experience after a few years of successful air layering of my plants. I wish you succes with your plants. Greeting, Marcel, from the Netherlands.
Perhaps an explanation to understand why you partially remove the bark at the bottom of the new cutting using the air layer method. The plant needs two sap streams to survive. The roots provide the plant with water and minerals/nutrients from the soil. These sap streams pass through the core via the wood vessels in the plant to the leaves. In the leaves photosynthesis takes place under the influence of sunlight/daylight, CO2 is absorbed from the air and converted into plant sugars. These plant sugars are moved by the plant sap flows along the green cambium layer under the bark and return to the roots of the plant. This allows the roots to grow, stay healthy and continue to provide the plant with water. By interrupting the bark in a ring around the branch, the back-flowing sap flows are interrupted. The plant sugars therefore remain in the top cuttings of the plant. ____ This encourages the cuttings to form new roots. Meanwhile, the cutting remains nourished and supplied with water from the roots of the mother plant. Because the cutting has formed sufficient roots of its own, it can be separated from the mother plant to continue growing independently as a new clone with the same properties as the mother plant. Because the cuttings are no longer fed by the sap flows from the mother plant, the new root balls on the cuttings must fully nourish the cuttings. By reducing the evaporation of water by the leaves on the cutting (this can be done by pruning the cutting back, but also by removing part of the leaf on the cutting), restoring the balance between water uptake via the roots and evaporation/water consumption through the leaf helps to recover the new cutting better and the cutting remains more vital. As the roots of the newly formed plant develop more, the plant will show more new growth, so more new leaves.
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
That looks simple but amazing. 👍👍👍
Very instructive video. Easier than budgrafting. I like the soil mix for the lemon plant as well. TQ
Very Super Video For Basic information about Airlayering Method
Thanks for sharing my friend,your like my father who always does grafting in any kind of fruit trees when he was still alive😊
Tnks
Mòmoo
เป็นวิธีที่ยอดเยี่ยม แหวกแนวจากทั่วๆไป ขอบคุณที่แบ่งปันความรู้ ติดตามชม
Congratulations! Very interesting and educational gardening video 🌱☀️
ماشاء اللہ, Very nice and very good worked By you
Great soothing planting music 👍🏽👍🏽😊
So beautiful Nice Mash Allah Nice idea zaberdest
🥰🥰😍😍
Loved it
Great content from start to finish
Hello
Very nice sharing ❤️
People who comes to listen nature they all are Beautiful Souls ❤️
Yes
Super 👍
Nice information beautiful video 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🌱🌱🌱🌱
Wonderful knowledge required for sustainable food sufficiency
Perfect
Wow successful congrats thanks for sharing.
Thanks 😍😍😍
Waaaww good job dear friend😍
Awesome thanks for sharing
Nice to see a new idea in layering
Thank you for this I will be using this on a bunch of my plants
th-cam.com/video/qIxa9jYAlsI/w-d-xo.html
Useful sharing , friend
❤️❤️❤️
Very informative video. Got new technique to propogate plant.
-Greetings from Maharashtra, India
🥰🥰😍😍
Processing days in BTN
Video chia sẻ rất hay thak bạn
Hi
This is what I wanted to see... Thanks ❤️
Very useful and thoroughly educational video.
Amazing 😍 thanks for The method you share
Great video and relaxing music.
Good technique, will do it, thanks for sharing.
😍😍😍
Nice
১|☞
Wow !! Thanks so much for showing this method !👍🏾
Never seen before . Very interesting. You are very clever !👏🏾👏🏾👌🏾😊
I'll probably try this at some point when I go back to Jamaica !😀
a good kind of markoting. thank you fpr sharing
Thanks for your comment 😘🥰😍
AWESOME.is.my first to.see this toget healthyroot thank you
Super 👍 🌹 Thanks for showing me how to prepare soil mix.❤️
Hadir sobat ☺️🙏
Bagus teorinya pembibitannya👍
Salam persahabatan 🙏
Wow, that looks amazing , healthy long roots. I think the coconut coir is the best medium for airlayer than other soil.
Hi
Lll
L
@@krishicitrotv ll
@@krishicitrotv l
Fantastic and lovely presentation Friend obrigado friend
Thanks for excellent video
I have NEVER seen this done before. But since I have a lemon tree in my front yard I'm gonna try it out tomorrow
Was it successful?
Khub sundor seyar dada vai
V shall use those used cups to do such things great u did it u r idea is great
Very nice video 👍
Yes, all will come with experience well done
🥰🥰😍😍
Nice
Good job was nice thank u fr information
Good jobs thanks for share love ❤️
Thanks for your comment 😘🥰😍
Nice
Good editing video
Great method. ❤❤
🥰🥰😍😍
very good video, i love this channel
Hi sir your 💡idea is very good👍 and the way showing video also very nice👏 bcz first to end you covered nicely thank you🙏 for smart work it's useful to many people
😍😍🥰🥰🙏🙏🙏
this is a madam
@@nysokhom6213 is is is the man english man.
lan0g lang ang Ang mga, Panday
great job 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Good idea i will try in this week...,
All the best😍😍😍❤️❤️❤️
What mix with coconut shell
Wow thank you for sharing. Nice
Wow.... Amazing..... Greetings from Bangladesh.
Thank you 💞😍😍😍
@@nysokhom6213 pp
Nice sharing my new friend ❤️❤️
Muy agradecido por ser un aporte ala comunidad por compartir sus conocimientos a nivel mundial 😉👍👏
Bendiciones saludos los invito a mi canal feliz día
Good job.. carryon
The only thing I don’t like about air layering is both sides of the skinned area grow roots, which leaves a chunk of stock and roots to die in the pot. But it works pretty good for rooting
The part that dies becomes a feeding medium for the plant. Nothing is wasted.
making a few cuttings from my meyer lemon tree (more of a bush) thanks for the easy walkthrough.
also i see the BB 🥶🥶🥶
Sir u r very intelligent nice video my 1 comment
😍😍😍
Soo nice trik very easy 👍👌
سلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته تبارك الله عليك بتوفيق مشاءالله جميل جداً الله يعطيك الصحة برافو عليكي شكرآ لك اختي الكريمة 🤲🌹👍
Assalamu alaikum
ممكن نتابع بعظنا
th-cam.com/video/FPK7bvB2XwM/w-d-xo.html
Grate video green is life🤗
Great content from Start to finish👍
Thanks for comment 😊😍😍😍
Thanks for sharing this video, very nice
Muy buen resultado 👍 grácias por compartir sus conocimientos.
Saludos😷
th-cam.com/video/qIxa9jYAlsI/w-d-xo.html
Bahut achha dost.
thanks for your share, that new for me
Thanks for visiting💕
Tnks
amazingly simple and very inspiring videos, success always 👍
God bless you and your family
Wow,super 👍
Very nice, really you teach lots of things... Well done 👍
Thank you so much 🥰🥰😍😍
@@nysokhom6213 ĺllĺ
Cách chiếc hay quá nên phổ biến nhà vườn
Hermoso trabajo Grasias por conpartir felicidades
Si muy bonito bendiciones te invito a mi canal bendiciones
Ysss in hindi will be better
Good video
#aliceindia
th-cam.com/video/-CXDrZqCbms/w-d-xo.html
Great.. nice marcouting of plants.. thank you for sharing your video.. I am so interested of all your upload videos.. God bless you 🇵🇭🇵🇭
amazing... thanks i like the music too
Another amazing video, my beloved
👏👏👏
Muito top e com um ótimo aprendisado.
Good video
#aliceindia
th-cam.com/video/-CXDrZqCbms/w-d-xo.html
Bravo 👏👏👏👌👍
Very good and useful video... 👍
Good! Greetings from Brazil
Welcome!😍😍😍❤️❤️❤️
This wonderful man used this clear cup. I used a gadget that i bought in Amazon. I should of used the clear cup and saved the money. To each his own.
Wooow, very Successful...
🥰🥰😍😍
Hi
Watching from Botswana. Thanks for sharing.
I think I can do this by watching the video well. Thank you.
Hello
Perfect teaching
Muchas gracias por compartir conocimiento. En que época del año se recomienda hacer ésta técnica?
Hola amigo! Gracias, adios
Refugio is asking what time of year to do this?
nice idea, ur video is so helpful .. tnx for sharing
Thank for your comment 😘🥰😍
Hi
Great work..👍👍...greetings from sri lanka...👏👏👏
🥰🥰😍😍
जो लोग अपनी प्यारी आंखों से ये कॉमेंट पढ़ रहे है भगवान उनकी माता पिता को लंबी उम्र दे 🙏🙏🙏🙏
While its a pretty neat idea...the only downside I see is that you have to water it often for root growth to occur...this can be a challenge for those that are engaged in daily work...I would go so far as using the lid of the coupon something similar to cover and seal the top to eliminate evaporation.
Another thing, respectfully... please answer the questions of which season did you do it etc etc as these questions are very important for the success of the process. Also..I would think you should wrap the container with say a black plastic to ensure successful root growth...
hope these constructive observations receives your favorable attention.Thank you.
Nice suggetions, I watched those in other video's about plant air-layering. Me myself mixed some mosses throug the ground wich I used to air-layering cuttings, made it very wet and closed the bucket for about 6 weeks. Never water it in mean time and it works ( in the Netherlands, not very hot weathers here), this is because the cutting will get its water from the root system of the motherplant, also the new to grow roots are primarie small so the won't take much water at first side. I myself use a container with a lid clicked on, fitting holes just below the lid through which the branch is surrounded with moist soil-moss mix. I remove the bark in a narrow ring around the branch, and fix the container with the removed ring of bark approximately at the bottom or in the middle of the container. In the first few weeks, scar tissue will form along the edge of the removed bark. The new roots will partly develop from this. It functions best from early spring when sap flows in the plant are starting and new growth develops, until late summer so that the cutting is rooted before sap flows decline and the plant rests in winter. As soon as the growth stops, the success of good root formation on the cutting will decrease. In winter and early spring, pruning material from the plant can be used to root directly into the ground. Best about 2/3 underground and inclined, almost lying, helps the sap flows of the newly developed roots to start more easily. Keep it in shade first moths, until much roots has growned, next it might get more sunny spot for faster devoleping and more grow. Succes. Greeting, Marcel (from the Netherlands).
When you water the tree the water will feed the branches. ALL branches even the branch that is air layered and the water and nutrients will go to the grafted branch and roots will come out from granted branch. It's like an umbilical cord feeding the baby as the mother eats until the baby is cut off from the umbilical cord and it's on its own. 👶🌳
The growing season is when you do air grafting. It will not do any good to graft tree when it's dormant.
Great technique video for grafting....
Excelente, gracias por compartir la experiencia. Saludos
Very good 👌👌👌👌
great job!!