Not sure if anyone gives a shit but if you're stoned like me atm then you can watch pretty much all the new series on instaflixxer. Been binge watching with my gf during the lockdown :)
Thanks, for the detailed video. I looked up a natural rooting aid for thanks. If a white willow tree is near you can grab sum twigs or bark and just soak in water for day. Might coukd root the willows plant yhem next hike🎉
4:55 to be fair making cuttings like this isn't natural either. Neither does the rooting hormone affect the genetics of the plant as you seem to be worried about. That being said this is still be best video I've seen so far on propagating like this, thank you for uploading. You have a new subscriber.
I am not a gardener or urban farmer, but I find myself drawn to the great information and how you deliver it! Definitely inspiring me to try my hand soon! Thank you!
Thanks for your videos which I’m finding very helpful due to your knowledge and detailed explanations. Please leave text on screen a little longer to eliminate having to backtrack.
Yes, since you should be cutting on a diagonal at the bottom (if you know what you're doing) the cut on the top should be straight...so you know which way is up.
For natural hormones you can use willow branches and blend them up in water then use that water as your root hormone . Willow has a high level of rooting hormone. Also Aloe can be used
I really like your videos. I want to take some grape and peach cuttings to start. I live in zone 6A. It is rather cold now in New Mexico. Can I keep you the cuttings in the house and put them out in the spring. Also take them out on different occasions to get them acclimated.
This is very helpful. some videos teach also to "scar" the cutting before potting into the soil. I don't see you do that. What's your take on that? Thank you! I am trying to propagate plum and peach tree cuttings.
I know of an apple tree growing behind a gas station on a parking lot island that grows huge fruits. I want to get some sticks from it and get them to root.
Thanks for your video, question, Have you Rooted a Apple, pear or peach tree cutting??? IF so, what was your result. These are the fruits that is tricky to do. Thanks
Most of the plants propagated by cutting don't have tap roots, I'm trying to think of even one... Large trees like hardwoods, nuts trees, apples, have taproots and aren't propagated via cuttings.
That's a great vid!! ❤ Fairly new to your channel and I'm really learning a lot. Thanks for the no nonsense content! 😁😄😎 Can I do it now in zone 7 or should I wait until end of winter?
Thanks! So glad you are learning a lot! You can do it anytime after your trees or vines go dormant. Since you have a long winter I would take the cutting, put in a ziploc with mildly damp papertower. Store in fridge until end of winter or beginning of spring and plant like I showed in the video.
You should take the cutting when the tree is dormant (loses all it's leaves) near the end of winter before last frost. Last year's growth is necessary. All the cuttings I showed except for passion fruit and dragon fruit need to be from a dormant cutting. I know it's confusing, there are general rules but you just have to learn over time how types, varieties, or specific plants are propagated. I need to put together a cheat sheet for everyone..
Cut from my own or friends trees, and many of the cuttings were from the California Rare Fruit Growers scion exchange. I'd just post on your local FB gardening group page and ask to take some dormant cuttings, I'm sure someone would let you for free or trade or teach them how to propagate ;)
I really appreciate your videos, however you may be right that nature is always right, but nature is also right in taking away your hard work. Organic farming does not mean no pesticides, it still relies on natural ones, not to mention that plants that are stung and attacked by pests produce chemicals much more dangerous than pesticides themselves. One good example, and maybe I was wrong in "ignoring nature", I have 100 plants of broccoli/cauliflowers, that were attacked at the same time by green stinkbugs and flea beetles, I tried dish-washing soap and vinegar and it did not work, when I was worried I would lose the entire crop I applied a phyretroid pesticide (cypermethrin) less than a quart solution, only spraying in the cores of the plants where the stinkbugs were burrowing, morning after all pests were dead. There were no bees and no lady bugs there, and no flowers. two weeks later, plants healed and started growing back. the potent stench of broccoli that you could smell while the pests ate the plants was completely gone. Now I am wrong, but I still didn't want to lose an entire crop. We have also stinkbugs that went on tomatoes, but we can accept the small loss / use the old "catch it and execute it".
It is unnatural in the sense that nature can't do it on it's own. But we are using the natural healing systems of the plant in order to do this. Nothing is being altered synthetically, just combining of like species and it's all handled by the tree, we are just the intermediary. So in that sense it is as natural as plant breeding.
Felco Pruners - amzn.to/2viIoG9
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Propagation Explanation: 00:42
Cutting Technique: 2:07
Rooting Hormone: 4:20
Planing: 6:03
Potting on: 6:56
Results: 7:55
Not sure if anyone gives a shit but if you're stoned like me atm then you can watch pretty much all the new series on instaflixxer. Been binge watching with my gf during the lockdown :)
@Jeremias Patrick yea, been watching on instaflixxer for since november myself :D
Thanks, for the detailed video. I looked up a natural rooting aid for thanks. If a white willow tree is near you can grab sum twigs or bark and just soak in water for day. Might coukd root the willows plant yhem next hike🎉
4:55 to be fair making cuttings like this isn't natural either.
Neither does the rooting hormone affect the genetics of the plant as you seem to be worried about.
That being said this is still be best video I've seen so far on propagating like this, thank you for uploading. You have a new subscriber.
I am not a gardener or urban farmer, but I find myself drawn to the great information and how you deliver it! Definitely inspiring me to try my hand soon! Thank you!
I love this! You can do it!
Thanks for the information, I want to try this with my grape vines this winter.
This is great. It's embarrassing that I didn't see this before you came by!
Thanks for your videos which I’m finding very helpful due to your knowledge and detailed explanations. Please leave text on screen a little longer to eliminate having to backtrack.
Yes, since you should be cutting on a diagonal at the bottom (if you know what you're doing) the cut on the top should be straight...so you know which way is up.
Great tips!... and the section where you've discussed natural rooting hormone, alone, was worth the entire video. So thanks for that too!
This was super helpful for me. Thank you so much!
Great information
when is the best time to take these cuttings say for muscadines and peaches and pecan trees.
For natural hormones you can use willow branches and blend them up in water then use that water as your root hormone . Willow has a high level of rooting hormone. Also Aloe can be used
Those are fantastic natural hormone recommendations!
I really like your videos. I want to take some grape and peach cuttings to start. I live in zone 6A. It is rather cold now in New Mexico. Can I keep you the cuttings in the house and put them out in the spring. Also take them out on different occasions to get them acclimated.
This is very helpful. some videos teach also to "scar" the cutting before potting into the soil. I don't see you do that. What's your take on that? Thank you! I am trying to propagate plum and peach tree cuttings.
I know of an apple tree growing behind a gas station on a parking lot island that grows huge fruits. I want to get some sticks from it and get them to root.
Thank you
Awesome Video. Thanks so much for sharing!
Thanks for your video, question, Have you Rooted a Apple, pear or peach tree cutting??? IF so, what was your result. These are the fruits that is tricky to do. Thanks
Loving it. Thanks man.
If you are doing cuttings can you leave them outside in the winter?
Great video
Great video. Thanks. I understand there is an issue about cuttings not able to grow a tap root. When would you avoid cuttings if you want a tap root?
Most of the plants propagated by cutting don't have tap roots, I'm trying to think of even one... Large trees like hardwoods, nuts trees, apples, have taproots and aren't propagated via cuttings.
How long will the cutting last after you cut it before you need to plant it
That's a great vid!! ❤ Fairly new to your channel and I'm really learning a lot. Thanks for the no nonsense content! 😁😄😎
Can I do it now in zone 7 or should I wait until end of winter?
Thanks! So glad you are learning a lot! You can do it anytime after your trees or vines go dormant. Since you have a long winter I would take the cutting, put in a ziploc with mildly damp papertower. Store in fridge until end of winter or beginning of spring and plant like I showed in the video.
@@NaturesAlwaysRight ❤ Thank you very much!!
Where do you store your fresh cuttings? Leave them out in a cool dark area or put them in the refrigerator?
Thanks
In the refrigerator in a zip lock bag with a barely damp paper towel. Best of luck!
Thanks Steven
I wish these informative videos had less loud high tempo music. It's annoying af.
5:50 Honey as a rooting Natural hormone
When taking active growing pomegranate, do u remove all the leaves/stems off your cutting before potting?
You should take the cutting when the tree is dormant (loses all it's leaves) near the end of winter before last frost. Last year's growth is necessary. All the cuttings I showed except for passion fruit and dragon fruit need to be from a dormant cutting. I know it's confusing, there are general rules but you just have to learn over time how types, varieties, or specific plants are propagated. I need to put together a cheat sheet for everyone..
I know that some places sell cuttings. Curious as to where you purchased your cuttings? Thanks!
Cut from my own or friends trees, and many of the cuttings were from the California Rare Fruit Growers scion exchange. I'd just post on your local FB gardening group page and ask to take some dormant cuttings, I'm sure someone would let you for free or trade or teach them how to propagate ;)
Great info. The.
Ty
Can you wax on the end in the air that way bacteria won't get the chance to get in still use honey to help grow the roots
My main problem is no to root cuttings, but how to grow them to a decent tree. No TH-cam footage about that.
raining? I thought you were in San Diego?
TFS
Fantastic video!! Where are you located?
I really appreciate your videos, however you may be right that nature is always right, but nature is also right in taking away your hard work. Organic farming does not mean no pesticides, it still relies on natural ones, not to mention that plants that are stung and attacked by pests produce chemicals much more dangerous than pesticides themselves. One good example, and maybe I was wrong in "ignoring nature", I have 100 plants of broccoli/cauliflowers, that were attacked at the same time by green stinkbugs and flea beetles, I tried dish-washing soap and vinegar and it did not work, when I was worried I would lose the entire crop I applied a phyretroid pesticide (cypermethrin) less than a quart solution, only spraying in the cores of the plants where the stinkbugs were burrowing, morning after all pests were dead. There were no bees and no lady bugs there, and no flowers. two weeks later, plants healed and started growing back. the potent stench of broccoli that you could smell while the pests ate the plants was completely gone. Now I am wrong, but I still didn't want to lose an entire crop. We have also stinkbugs that went on tomatoes, but we can accept the small loss / use the old "catch it and execute it".
willo water comes from willo tree & is natural but its a common practice in organics to use IBA-K no fungicide
So is propagation unnatural do what works for you
It is unnatural in the sense that nature can't do it on it's own. But we are using the natural healing systems of the plant in order to do this. Nothing is being altered synthetically, just combining of like species and it's all handled by the tree, we are just the intermediary. So in that sense it is as natural as plant breeding.