My dad would only use rooting hormone with things difficult to root. Even though rooting hormone helped things root quicker, he believed that the healthiest plants emerged from those that rooted without hormones. My dad had the grenest fingers of anyone who was not professionally involved in gardening. He came from a long line of gardeners and has taught me a lot. It's great to see you teaching others.
Great Video Mike! Have you tried adding some worm castings as you are rooting? I raise millions of worms for fertilizer for my garden and also to show others how to care for them :) the results are outstanding!
Haven’t watched in a long while-since you injured your finger- I notice it healed but with a bit of a bend to the finger-how’s your range of motion? Hope your pinkie is okay.
You have the most NO BS approach to rooting anything. One of my fav videos of yours was when you rooted a large tree truck. Everyone is so quick to say it cant be done, but not you!!! Thanks for all of your hard work and being an inspiration in the gardening space.
My parents have overgrown grapevines that are probably 100+ years old. Been thinking about getting some cuttings and seeing about rooting them up for anyone in the extensive family who'd like to have a piece of the old farmstead.
It's always a blessing to have a great family farm crew to help with the research! With the average current farming age of 55 years of age, it's great to see that young farmers are ready to take the bull by the horns! Thanks for the grape insight.
You may use as well lentils. Leave a bunch of them for 4 days in a glass with some water. After you see them developing some roots of their own, mash them and you get a nice natural rooting hormone. You may keep it in a fridge for about 15 days to use it with everything...from graoe cuttings to apple tree cuttings. Love your videos. Cheers!
You got me all excited- I am about to prune my vines and will have plenty of softwood cuttings available. Still, I was planning to follow the hydrangea tote method anyway so we will see how it goes! Thanks for your videos.
@juarezderrick9647 how did your cuttings go? I just got 2 starters hopefully next year I can get more cuttings to make more cuttings to make more.. you get the point lol
I was taught 3 buds to a cutting. Slanted cut below bottom bud and root hormone it. Plant TWO bottom buds underground to form roots, leaving top bud above ground to grow the vine. Root hormone comes from willows. You can make your own 'rooting water' by cutting up a willow branch in small pieces and pouring hot water over them. When cool, you have a solution to place cuttings in for better rooting. And walnuts have the opposite of the willow. Things don't grow under walnut trees as they are anti-rooting.
So glad to have found this. My friend has beautiful sweet green seedless grapes in her yard growing for over 40 yrs. I took a four nice “semi-hard” cuttings the other day, brought them home and some parts were growing sideways & I can’t tell which was the top from the bottom. Any suggestions to determine that? Love your videos and that you actually answer questions. I always give LIKES when questions are answered. ♥️Love your rose videos too. I had over 55 roses at one time. I’m excited to duplicate many of the others I have. One of my favs is a long stemmed red rose called Veteran’s Honor. Very prolific bloomer here in Portland Oregon, resistant to disease, never see fungus on it, very sparse fragrance, but huge deep red blooms galore all summer long. Thank you - so happy I found your vids. 😘
Thanks so much for the nice comment and support, Jan! Thank you also for the red rose recommendation. I'll look for that one at the nursery. To tell the top from bottom, you can always look at the bud sites. There will be an area where the previous years leaves fell off the branch in the fall and a scar will be left behind. The new bud is always just above that scar. Good luck and have fun!
Hey,Mike! I live at Pensacola FL. Can I try to start vine cuttings this time of the year as well? if they root I can put them into the shed or to the green house
I saw your helpful videos and tried grafting European Cabernet Sauvignon on American rootstock that is resistant to Phylloxera. Omega grafting, then waxing them and sticking them in a bucket with basic garden soil in a very small greenhouse. 80-85% rate of success. Initially I kept all the cuttings in the fridge for three-four months. I believe that when you take them out of the fridge, graft them and put them in a warm greenhouse, they callus like crazy and develop fast roots. Thanks, man! Greetings from Europe.
I loved your demonstration. My wife and I just got through doing what you did in the beginning. I would like to see how you plant yours next because we are trying to grow these wonderful muscadines. Thank you.
Thanks Brian. Once they develop enough roots, just pot them up, fertilize, water, and grow them on for a year in a protected area. The following spring you can plant them with more confidence. I've planted newly rooted cuttings directly out in the garden and had great success but there is an element of rolling the dice with that if the weather is bad that year or you get some early frosts.
you can root a mucadine easy just leave a long vine when purning in fall droop it down to the ground place some dirt on it and leave a foot or more uncovered at the tip end next spring check for roots if so cut main vine bring back up to the wire dig up the rooted vine plant where you need it
Thanks! Yeah, definitely a very noticeable different in how the cuttings came out and nice to see the difference with my own eyes instead of just reading about it.
Mike, it's great to see your cute garden assistants. I love that they are learning so much from you about propagating different plants. Great life lessons! I've decided that tomorrow morning, bright and early, I'm going to take cuttings from all of my different hydrangeas, my variegated red-twig dogwood, my burning bush, and from my hardy hibiscus, so I can propagate them. I'll call them my Independence Day plants because I'm liberating them from their parent plants. Okay, so that was lame, but I'm ready to go, with planting medium already in the pots. I just got a brand new container of rooting medium too. I finally used up the old jar. I hope your family has a wonderful 4th of July weekend! ~Margie
Thanks for this video as I have one Coronation vine that survived up here in cold Canada and would like to propagate it. I started four cuttings I purchased from a grower, and only this one seemed to be hardy enough to survive winters up here. Your girls must really enjoy learning horticulture hands on. When I was a kid many decades ago I loved doing gardening here on the farm with my parents. Seeding was my favourite part, but weeding during summer not so much. Back then we pretty much grew all our own vegetables for winter food supply.
We grow quite a few vegetables every year and my wife cans close to 50 quart jars every year. We do a lot of pickles, beets, and green beans. I'd like to do a big project this summer of growing tons of broccoli so we can blanche and freeze it. We tried it last summer on a small scale and it worked out well.
I have a huge grape vine climbing up a pine tree that's about to get harvested. This is so I can keep some of the grapes and make more. Thank you very much
Here is an idea for an experiment: Coat the entire cutting that is going to be above ground with parafin (either canning parafin or melted candle wax) to control drying out of the cutting. See if it helps, doing some with parafin and some without.
I know a lot of people do that. I just never have a problem with them drying out so I don't worry about it. I suppose a hotter or drier climate may need this.
Thanks for the info! I'm starting some grape vine cuttings today. I'm wondering if, instead of using rooting powder or gel, if watering with willow water can make a difference? Do you have any expeience with that?
I've played around with it a little but no official experiments. I found a study (and there's limited info) showing that it isn't effective and doesn't contain the hormones that we think it does. I haven't dug too deep into it though and I know there are a lot of people who swear by it. Good luck with your grape cuttings!
I worked commercial farms (Idaho & Washington) when I was a young man, its completely different from the backyard garden model by using tons of fertilizer and more pesticides than is reasonable. I started using organic products like fish & kelp, once I figured out how the soil food web works, people tell me I have mad gardening skills. Our property has a Concord grape that was planted in the 40's (according to a visitor). I took a cutting in January when everything was completely frozen, in a few weeks the hardwood cane was budding leaf growth in a water bottle filled with potting mix. Did the same thing with a Blueberry Grape and gave the rooted cutting to a lady in a medical office.. Learning from this channel and have some success this year with peach trees indoors in a cool room.
You beautiful beautiful man! I have been having TERRIBLE success doing this. Again WAMM! Mike puts out a 🔥 video, teaching me how to do it. MashaAllah! May God bless you and your family 🥺
I am getting my cuttings from a vineyard tomorrow and will start this process right away. My question is when will it be time to move the rooted cuttings into my vineyard? I am in Kansas for geographical reference.
You'll want to grow them in pots for the first year in a protected location where they will get care and water frequently. After they make it through the first winter, you can plant them out.
Mike, I placed cuttings in water with hormone on April 26th. It has been two-weeks and I still have no roots. I see the some nubs are leafing out. Any suggestions and timeframe in getting roots?
good show mike and the girls. i guess the hormone does the job. i'm trying to root geranium cutting. grandpa used to take a vine on the plant, put it in the ground with the extended leaves exposed, put a rock on top of the buried part, and voila, a new plant. happy 4th guys.
I need to figure out which variety of grape I have growing and then get a couple of cross-pollinator varieties. The grapes on it are plentiful this year but with a cross-pollinator, they will produce more grapes and much more flavorful. Great job, Mike!
Yes, I agree 100%. I've got 3 different varieties here just for that reason. They seem to produce tones of grapes and the grapes are getting bigger and better developed each year as the vines mature more each year.
@@MikeKincaid79 Mine might be a Niagara. It’s a seeded fruit. Green color. I remember Concord being a great match variety. Which do you have? Did you plant the cuttings in the video or toss?
Most grapes are self-fruitful, so cross pollination is seldom necessary. My biggest problem with grapes is the over abundance of grapes on a vine. I have to prune the bunches back so the ones I leave are big fat grapes.
Hey Mike and girls, awesome video!! Gotta love those roots (it never gets old seeing roots like that). Mike could you do an experiment showing which rooting hormone roots best?? Clonex vs Dip n Grow vs Hormodin 3. Please I want to purchase a rooting hormone for my cuttings but don’t know which one is best and I want to give them their best chance you know. Please?? I would really appreciate it. Thanks Mike!!
Not sure if you saw it but I did a whole video on just rooting hormone a couple years ago and my thoughts on it. I don't think one is better than the other, just different hormones and concentrations for different plants and types of cuttings.
I think it would be a waste. Once they root, you really only need good soil and a well rounded fertilizer. The plant will do the rest. Micchorizae fungi has been shown to be very beneficial to root development and you could add that.
Just pruned my grapes today (very late) and I saved several pieces and I'm going to try to root them. Just ordered some of the same root hormone you use through your link, but it won't be here for several days...you think it would be ok to just take them out of the soil and still dip them in the hormone (and stick them back in) or might cause some type of shock?? 🤔
I'd put them in a plastic bag and into the fridge for a few days until the hormone gets there. I had pruned my grape vines and the vines just sat out in the open for a few days on my burn pile before I decided to go back and take some cuttings, and you see how they rooted!
Yes, but to be honest I don't think there was much benefit. I did some research on this and found some interesting things about willow water that lead me to believe it's more legend than truth. I'll have to do more experimenting with it.
How much frequently I should be watering for these. I live in Arizona and it’s already spring here and we are at 70s . As suggested I will be keeping them in full shade of course. Thx
Most gardeners - even strangers - will probably let you take a couple small cuttings from their established grapevines if you ask them nicely. Just walk around your neighborhood and ask a neighbor who has one :-)
Thanks for this. You inspired me to take cuttings from my 20-year old vine, which I have been wanting to propagate in my backyard. I took 12 cuttings, didn't use any rooting hormone, put them directly in the ground and voila! It is August, and three of them are growing!
Wow, the girls are getting big! What I was taught (for the northeast) cut the vines, 2 nodes each. Slant cut on the bottom, flat top. Bundle them together, wrap in burlap, and bury till spring. Plant in gallon pots and in fall, transplant to the vineyard. What I'm doing in Arizona is old-style, drop a vine to the earth, bury part of it, cover with mulch and keep moist. Next spring after bud break, separate the new plant. hasta chico y las ninitas!
Man I have a white seedless vine. Going to give it a try. Just not sure if I can cut thin ones? Started figs in basement going to try the grapes. Dude you are like a good drug. Lol Thanks man
I have a feeling that they're like figs. You can probably take hardwood cuttings from older wood, at any time of year and get them to root. Maybe I need to try this at different times of the year. Some people root them as softwood cuttings but they are so easy to root as hardwood that I figure, why mess around with it.
@@MikeKincaid79 I also searched on the web and couldn't find anything. I'm pretty sure it will be successful. However, for how long. I guess I'm going to have to experiment with it. Thanks
Hi Mike Great video Im in NSW Australia (2 hours from Sydney). After you exposed the roots, do you replant them. Do you have a video on that Thanks Steve
Yes, you can replant them. I don't normally expose the roots though. I only did this for video purposes and to show how well they rooted. Normally, you would just leave them alone and let them continue to grow.
Lol I did this last fall. Just cut and stuck in the garden. Now I have grapes everywhere. I wish I had the same luck with Quince. I keep stealing my cuttings from my neighbors ...no Bueno. Any ideas?
Mike, That is a great demo! I just bought some of the very same kind of hormone you are using here. Question: can I root grape vines in mid April in Texas or is it too hot already? I may have missed it, but what is the time frame it took to root those vines?
They root in about 6 to 8 weeks. As far as rooting them in April, it depends on if the new growth has already started and how far along it is. It's best to get them started right before the new growth emerges.
Thanks so much, Sean! I actually watered them about every other day just to keep lots of moisture in the pot and around the cuttings. You can get away with watering them so much because they aren't in a sealed container and have plenty of air flow around them. Make sure to have a good draining medium too.
. Can we propagate these cuttings in the Fall inside a greenhouse, or it must be done only in the late Winter time? I've got some cuttings, but not sure if I did the propagation now, will work out too.
Yes, you can do this at any time through the late fall and winter. I prefer the late winter because they will root and then have all summer to grow big and healthy. If you root them now in a greenhouse, you have to manage them all winter with a heat and light source. You can also just stick the cuttings now and wait for them to root when the weather warms. I'm not sure what the advantage of that would be.
You could definitely do that. The advantage of putting them all in one pot is it saves time, space, and material. I wait until late winter to up-pot, when the roots are dormant and tough so it’s not a problem.
You could definitely do that. The advantage of putting them all in one pot is it saves time, space, and material. I wait until late winter to up-pot, when the roots are dormant and tough so it’s not a problem.
Hi. I received a large concord vine (5ft??) on a mature woody stalk in a large nursery pot. It came from a very overgrown bush at leat 30 ft tall, crawling up a tree.. It has 3 small bundles of unripe grapes on it. Its July in Ohio. Can I keep it in the container during winter in an attached unheated garage until spring? Should I try to prune it this year? I can keep it outside but didn't want to have it buried in snow. Thank you!!
Yes, you can store it in an unheated garage or shed and it should do just fine. Make sure to keep the soil moist through the winter (but not soaking wet). I prune my grapes in late winter.
Your girls are adorbs. You are raising the next generation of plant enthusiasts.
What’s an adorb?
I have been taking cuttings from everything because of you…eyeing my neighbors plants now …send bail $$ 😂
LOL, you've got the bug for sure!
I've taken cuttings at McDonald's & other business'es
Me too! 🤣
@@66bigbuds lol love this !!
Me too lmao I'm hooked
We all are Rooting for you Mike 👍
My dad would only use rooting hormone with things difficult to root. Even though rooting hormone helped things root quicker, he believed that the healthiest plants emerged from those that rooted without hormones. My dad had the grenest fingers of anyone who was not professionally involved in gardening. He came from a long line of gardeners and has taught me a lot. It's great to see you teaching others.
Your dad sounds like a cool dude!
Great Video Mike! Have you tried adding some worm castings as you are rooting? I raise millions of worms for fertilizer for my garden and also to show others how to care for them :) the results are outstanding!
Haven’t watched in a long while-since you injured your finger- I notice it healed but with a bit of a bend to the finger-how’s your range of motion? Hope your pinkie is okay.
You have the most NO BS approach to rooting anything. One of my fav videos of yours was when you rooted a large tree truck. Everyone is so quick to say it cant be done, but not you!!! Thanks for all of your hard work and being an inspiration in the gardening space.
Awesome! Happy to spread the enthusiasm.
Thank you 😊
You are a good father and so nice to see children involved in gardening 👨🌾
My parents have overgrown grapevines that are probably 100+ years old. Been thinking about getting some cuttings and seeing about rooting them up for anyone in the extensive family who'd like to have a piece of the old farmstead.
Right on! That's what it's all about
Cute little girls are having very kindly heart's. God bless them.
It's always a blessing to have a great family farm crew to help with the research! With the average current farming age of 55 years of age, it's great to see that young farmers are ready to take the bull by the horns! Thanks for the grape insight.
Haha, love the pun, and you are so welcome!
Indiana
sole
You may use as well lentils. Leave a bunch of them for 4 days in a glass with some water. After you see them developing some roots of their own, mash them and you get a nice natural rooting hormone. You may keep it in a fridge for about 15 days to use it with everything...from graoe cuttings to apple tree cuttings.
Love your videos. Cheers!
I’ve never heard of this. Really cool! Thanks!!
Можно с черенками винограда поставить пруток ивы в стакан с водой, будет такой же эффект
Awe... you're little girls admire you so much. Great job dad!
You are great with kids Mike,! It’s great to see a spark in their eyes and are actually absorbing the science you are offering 👍🎩😎
I love them 2 and it's my job to inspire them. Hopefully their lives will be full of wonder and excitement!
I have been taking cuttings from all the plants. Thank you so much . Love to watch all the videos from you. I learn a lot.
So glad you're learning from them. Have fun taking cuttings!
Best clip that I saw in last 5 years!! Perfect.
Hey, thanks so much! Glad you enjoyed it.
@@MikeKincaid79 Mike, you are blessed bro. Go on
Gotta love the money shots on those BEAUTIFUL roots!!! Awesome!
My favorite part! Thanks for watching, Matt.
You got me all excited- I am about to prune my vines and will have plenty of softwood cuttings available. Still, I was planning to follow the hydrangea tote method anyway so we will see how it goes! Thanks for your videos.
You're very welcome, Thomas! Good luck on your grape vine cuttings. I'd love to hear how they do as softwood for you.
How did your softwood cuttings go? I had too many branches come up this spring so I trimmed a few off and have them in pots with rooting hormone.
@juarezderrick9647 how did your cuttings go? I just got 2 starters hopefully next year I can get more cuttings to make more cuttings to make more.. you get the point lol
I was taught 3 buds to a cutting. Slanted cut below bottom bud and root hormone it. Plant TWO bottom buds underground to form roots, leaving top bud above ground to grow the vine. Root hormone comes from willows. You can make your own 'rooting water' by cutting up a willow branch in small pieces and pouring hot water over them. When cool, you have a solution to place cuttings in for better rooting. And walnuts have the opposite of the willow. Things don't grow under walnut trees as they are anti-rooting.
Great video guys, just inspired me to multiply the Concord grape I have out back. Always love the videos that have the final outcome included
Good luck on your Concord grape cuttings!
Love the videos! So much good advice! So much enthusiasm! You’re like the Steve Irwin of the plant world 😃
I love that comment and am honored to get the comparison!
Thank you all for making videos and thank you for taking people
You're welcome, Peraro! Glad you enjoy them.
So glad to have found this. My friend has beautiful sweet green seedless grapes in her yard growing for over 40 yrs. I took a four nice “semi-hard” cuttings the other day, brought them home and some parts were growing sideways & I can’t tell which was the top from the bottom. Any suggestions to determine that? Love your videos and that you actually answer questions. I always give LIKES when questions are answered. ♥️Love your rose videos too. I had over 55 roses at one time. I’m excited to duplicate many of the others I have. One of my favs is a long stemmed red rose called Veteran’s Honor. Very prolific bloomer here in Portland Oregon, resistant to disease, never see fungus on it, very sparse fragrance, but huge deep red blooms galore all summer long. Thank you - so happy I found your vids. 😘
Thanks so much for the nice comment and support, Jan! Thank you also for the red rose recommendation. I'll look for that one at the nursery. To tell the top from bottom, you can always look at the bud sites. There will be an area where the previous years leaves fell off the branch in the fall and a scar will be left behind. The new bud is always just above that scar. Good luck and have fun!
Hey,Mike! I live at Pensacola FL. Can I try to start vine cuttings this time of the year as well? if they root I can put them into the shed or to the green house
I saw your helpful videos and tried grafting European Cabernet Sauvignon on American rootstock that is resistant to Phylloxera. Omega grafting, then waxing them and sticking them in a bucket with basic garden soil in a very small greenhouse. 80-85% rate of success. Initially I kept all the cuttings in the fridge for three-four months. I believe that when you take them out of the fridge, graft them and put them in a warm greenhouse, they callus like crazy and develop fast roots. Thanks, man! Greetings from Europe.
I'm about to cut in Fall, do you think I should put the cuts in the fridge until Spring?
learned something again little bro, and you have two beautiful helpers.
Thanks Melvin👍 I learned a lot from this one too and will definitely continue to use rooting hormone on my cuttings.
The way we do it in Brisbane Australia we just put them in a bucket of water. They root and grow plenty of leaves
This was such an amazing experiment and your enthusiasm about the amazing roots really excited me to give this a try. Subscribed.
Thanks and have fun!
I loved your demonstration. My wife and I just got through doing what you did in the beginning. I would like to see how you plant yours next because we are trying to grow these wonderful muscadines. Thank you.
Thanks Brian. Once they develop enough roots, just pot them up, fertilize, water, and grow them on for a year in a protected area. The following spring you can plant them with more confidence. I've planted newly rooted cuttings directly out in the garden and had great success but there is an element of rolling the dice with that if the weather is bad that year or you get some early frosts.
@@MikeKincaid79 hey brother I really appreciate your advice. I will wait until the following year since that's how you do it. Thanks again. Brian
you can root a mucadine easy just leave a long vine when purning in fall droop it down to the ground place some dirt on it and leave a foot or more uncovered at the tip end next spring check for roots if so cut main vine bring back up to the wire dig up the rooted vine plant where you need it
Your buddies are so adorable. You’re a blessed father ❤
What a difference with the rooting hormone, thanks Mike great video.
Thanks! Yeah, definitely a very noticeable different in how the cuttings came out and nice to see the difference with my own eyes instead of just reading about it.
Cool roots!! I love being in your videos!! 👍
I love you being in them. Thanks for your help!
Mike, it's great to see your cute garden assistants. I love that they are learning so much from you about propagating different plants. Great life lessons! I've decided that tomorrow morning, bright and early, I'm going to take cuttings from all of my different hydrangeas, my variegated red-twig dogwood, my burning bush, and from my hardy hibiscus, so I can propagate them. I'll call them my Independence Day plants because I'm liberating them from their parent plants. Okay, so that was lame, but I'm ready to go, with planting medium already in the pots. I just got a brand new container of rooting medium too. I finally used up the old jar. I hope your family has a wonderful 4th of July weekend! ~Margie
Good luck with all your cuttings, Margie, and Happy Independence Day to you too!
Thanks for this video as I have one Coronation vine that survived up here in cold Canada and would like to propagate it. I started four cuttings I purchased from a grower, and only this one seemed to be hardy enough to survive winters up here.
Your girls must really enjoy learning horticulture hands on. When I was a kid many decades ago I loved doing gardening here on the farm with my parents. Seeding was my favourite part, but weeding during summer not so much. Back then we pretty much grew all our own vegetables for winter food supply.
We grow quite a few vegetables every year and my wife cans close to 50 quart jars every year. We do a lot of pickles, beets, and green beans. I'd like to do a big project this summer of growing tons of broccoli so we can blanche and freeze it. We tried it last summer on a small scale and it worked out well.
Вы укрываете виноград зимой?
Best grapes cuttings video I've seen, just started my garden here in Malaysia...luv your video😉
Wonderful! Have fun building your garden!!!
Watching from 18000 miles away,keep it up Mr.Mike.
Miss you man. When you coming back?
I have a huge grape vine climbing up a pine tree that's about to get harvested. This is so I can keep some of the grapes and make more. Thank you very much
Right on!
Adorable young ladies! ❤ so awesome!! 🌻 🌼 🌻 🌼 🌻 love the example ur setting, feeding ur girls wisdom and self empowerment... now that's a 💯 dad!!!!
Exactly! Teaching self reliance.
Mike ,What fertilizer your using for the grapes plant? Thanks you
Could I also put them in my greenhouse for those two months?
Yes, just make sure it's not too warm and you don't get top growth before roots.
@@MikeKincaid79 Thanks Mike!
Here is an idea for an experiment: Coat the entire cutting that is going to be above ground with parafin (either canning parafin or melted candle wax) to control drying out of the cutting. See if it helps, doing some with parafin and some without.
I know a lot of people do that. I just never have a problem with them drying out so I don't worry about it. I suppose a hotter or drier climate may need this.
There’s no need for that, unless you live in a desert
And simple mulching would be preferable rather than wasting candle wax or using paraffin petroleum based by products.
EXACTLY @@greenfingersclubmalta
Great gardener and fun Dad.
Hi Mike, thank you for your lovely ideas. I have retired recently and am enjoying your short videos. Good luck from Melbourne Australia
Congrats on retirement! Enjoy all your free time.
Thanks for the info! I'm starting some grape vine cuttings today. I'm wondering if, instead of using rooting powder or gel, if watering with willow water can make a difference? Do you have any expeience with that?
I've played around with it a little but no official experiments. I found a study (and there's limited info) showing that it isn't effective and doesn't contain the hormones that we think it does. I haven't dug too deep into it though and I know there are a lot of people who swear by it. Good luck with your grape cuttings!
Thanks, always good stuff, this will be used in my yard and horticulture class
Wow, I'm honored. Thanks for sharing with your class.
Cool Dad! Cool Kids! Keep training them Mike. They are our future :)
Doing my best! Thanks Trevor.
I worked commercial farms (Idaho & Washington) when I was a young man, its completely different from the backyard garden model by using tons of fertilizer and more pesticides than is reasonable. I started using organic products like fish & kelp, once I figured out how the soil food web works, people tell me I have mad gardening skills. Our property has a Concord grape that was planted in the 40's (according to a visitor). I took a cutting in January when everything was completely frozen, in a few weeks the hardwood cane was budding leaf growth in a water bottle filled with potting mix. Did the same thing with a Blueberry Grape and gave the rooted cutting to a lady in a medical office.. Learning from this channel and have some success this year with peach trees indoors in a cool room.
Thanks for sharing your story and I'm glad the videos are useful for you!
Thank you so much. you help me a lot. May God Always Bless you & your Family. Amen
Beautifully done, it's a pleasure to watch, I work alone but with willow.
Thanks Goran
Love this experiment your doing with the grape cuttings.
Thanks, I love trying different things around here and seeing what works better.
*YOU’RE*
You beautiful beautiful man! I have been having TERRIBLE success doing this. Again WAMM! Mike puts out a 🔥 video, teaching me how to do it. MashaAllah! May God bless you and your family 🥺
I am getting my cuttings from a vineyard tomorrow and will start this process right away. My question is when will it be time to move the rooted cuttings into my vineyard? I am in Kansas for geographical reference.
You'll want to grow them in pots for the first year in a protected location where they will get care and water frequently. After they make it through the first winter, you can plant them out.
Thank you for learning to grow grapes from Thailand
It's my pleasure
Yes
Mike, I placed cuttings in water with hormone on April 26th. It has been two-weeks and I still have no roots. I see the some nubs are leafing out. Any suggestions and timeframe in getting roots?
good show mike and the girls. i guess the hormone does the job. i'm trying to root geranium cutting. grandpa used to take a vine on the plant, put it in the ground with the extended leaves exposed, put a rock on top of the buried part, and voila, a new plant. happy 4th guys.
I’m a little late but happy 4th, Carmine.
Excellent going to stop by soon
Excellent job
I’m learning so much
So cool to see how easy it can be!
It really is!
very nice, i have many feet of fence covered in vines! loved this vid!
Now you can have many more feet covered in vines! Glad you enjoyed the video.
@@MikeKincaid79 just potted up some cuttings, we will see where this experiment takes us!
I'm new to a grape vines. I have some 3-4years old. What time of the year to do cuttings, and when to plant them in soil?
Thank you very much 🤝
It's all in this video
Hello Mike and girls! Good video, great experiment. I did an experiment on rooting sweet potato slips, should have it uploaded tonight.
OAG
Awesome! Can't wait to see it, Charles. I've often wanted to get some sweet potato around here. Looking forward to your video.
Great video! I’ll probably be using rooting hormone as well but I will also experiment! Thanks for the info!
Have fun!
Amazing, big hugs from karimunjawa islands 😎
I have hundreds I'm putting up! I think I have 6 varieties. Can't wait to get into my own mini-farm!
Potting up... autocorrect 🙄
You had your pretty helpers this time Good to see you guys!
Interesting, so cool!
Happy Independence Day! Hugs all around!!!🤗💜🤗
Yep, happy Independence Day, Camelia! Love having my little helpers with me. They did a great job!!!
I need to figure out which variety of grape I have growing and then get a couple of cross-pollinator varieties. The grapes on it are plentiful this year but with a cross-pollinator, they will produce more grapes and much more flavorful. Great job, Mike!
Yes, I agree 100%. I've got 3 different varieties here just for that reason. They seem to produce tones of grapes and the grapes are getting bigger and better developed each year as the vines mature more each year.
@@MikeKincaid79 Mine might be a Niagara. It’s a seeded fruit. Green color. I remember Concord being a great match variety. Which do you have? Did you plant the cuttings in the video or toss?
Most grapes are self-fruitful, so cross pollination is seldom necessary. My biggest problem with grapes is the over abundance of grapes on a vine. I have to prune the bunches back so the ones I leave are big fat grapes.
Hi mr.mike.say hi from indonesian grape farmers..good to see you..
Hello there! Thanks for visiting the channel.
Hey Mike and girls, awesome video!! Gotta love those roots (it never gets old seeing roots like that). Mike could you do an experiment showing which rooting hormone roots best?? Clonex vs Dip n Grow vs Hormodin 3. Please I want to purchase a rooting hormone for my cuttings but don’t know which one is best and I want to give them their best chance you know. Please?? I would really appreciate it. Thanks Mike!!
Not sure if you saw it but I did a whole video on just rooting hormone a couple years ago and my thoughts on it. I don't think one is better than the other, just different hormones and concentrations for different plants and types of cuttings.
use natural hormone. try honey, even human spit, really. research it
Excellent video! Very informative. Great job of explaining what your doing and how to do it.i plant at home table grape jupiter
Thanks, this was a fun video to make. Such an easy way to multiply your grapes for free.
Bună am și eu o întrebare în pământul pt flori se înrădăcineaza sau trebuie pământ special ca sa înrădăcineeze butasi de vie
As allways : 👍👍👍😊 Planning to do the same next spring.
Super fun!
I love seeing the roots!!! 👀😄
Me too!!!
Hi Mike can you put root hormones mixed in the soil when planting new plants as a helper ?
I think it would be a waste. Once they root, you really only need good soil and a well rounded fertilizer. The plant will do the rest. Micchorizae fungi has been shown to be very beneficial to root development and you could add that.
@@MikeKincaid79 thank you!
Just pruned my grapes today (very late) and I saved several pieces and I'm going to try to root them. Just ordered some of the same root hormone you use through your link, but it won't be here for several days...you think it would be ok to just take them out of the soil and still dip them in the hormone (and stick them back in) or might cause some type of shock?? 🤔
I'd put them in a plastic bag and into the fridge for a few days until the hormone gets there. I had pruned my grape vines and the vines just sat out in the open for a few days on my burn pile before I decided to go back and take some cuttings, and you see how they rooted!
Have you ever tried Willow water for rooting?
Yes, but to be honest I don't think there was much benefit. I did some research on this and found some interesting things about willow water that lead me to believe it's more legend than truth. I'll have to do more experimenting with it.
what soil was used? is it just potting soil. Also did you scrape the wood at the bottom before putting them in the soil?
How much frequently I should be watering for these. I live in Arizona and it’s already spring here and we are at 70s . As suggested I will be keeping them in full shade of course. Thx
I would probably be watering them daily or every other day, as long as they are in a good draining and inert medium.
God bless the Girls, they are simply awesome👍.
Best little helpers
Those girls are so smiley and adorable. I want to grow some grape cuttings now but where can I buy them Mike?
Just visit a local nursery and buy a live plant. Then you can take all the cuttings you want in the years to come.
Most gardeners - even strangers - will probably let you take a couple small cuttings from their established grapevines if you ask them nicely. Just walk around your neighborhood and ask a neighbor who has one :-)
Thanks for this. You inspired me to take cuttings from my 20-year old vine, which I have been wanting to propagate in my backyard. I took 12 cuttings, didn't use any rooting hormone, put them directly in the ground and voila! It is August, and three of them are growing!
Wonderful!
Wow, the girls are getting big!
What I was taught (for the northeast) cut the vines, 2 nodes each. Slant cut on the bottom, flat top. Bundle them together, wrap in burlap, and bury till spring. Plant in gallon pots and in fall, transplant to the vineyard.
What I'm doing in Arizona is old-style, drop a vine to the earth, bury part of it, cover with mulch and keep moist. Next spring after bud break, separate the new plant. hasta chico y las ninitas!
Sounds like you've got it down like a well oiled machine, lol
You should do a contest and send winners a grapevine. So cool!!
That's a cool idea!
They took great, well done
Yeah, these grapes rooted so well. Don't think there's any other way I'd want to propagate them.
My vine is sprouting nodes, once those nodes get bigger can I take cuts to root those cuts?? It got pruned last winter and forgot to take cuts.
Yes, you can take cuttings of cuttings of cuttings and multiply your plants out 1000 or more times.
Man I have a white seedless vine. Going to give it a try. Just not sure if I can cut thin ones? Started figs in basement going to try the grapes. Dude you are like a good drug. Lol
Thanks man
Hahaha, love it. Glad to give ya a fix from time to time.
AS ALWAYS, VERY GOOD VIDEO, Mike what other time is better to propagate those grapes? after summer around September or October? Thanks!!!
I have a feeling that they're like figs. You can probably take hardwood cuttings from older wood, at any time of year and get them to root. Maybe I need to try this at different times of the year. Some people root them as softwood cuttings but they are so easy to root as hardwood that I figure, why mess around with it.
THANKS A LOT FOR THE TIPS, I’ll try different seasons then and I’ll see what happen!!
Good job, great video and beautiful daughter sir.. thanks for all from indonesia..👍👍🙏🙏
Thanks Agus, glad you enjoyed it!
الحقيقة فيديو رائع والأحلى هو روح الشباب والاندفاع وحب الزراعة التي يملكها ويعلمها الأبناء
تحية لكم
مسرور لأنك استمتعت بها. شكرا للمشاهدة. نحن نحب زراعة النباتات هنا، ونعم، أشرك أطفالي بقدر ما أستطيع. الله يبارك.
Hey Mike, can you graft flame red grapes on to muscadine root stock.
I googled it but there is nothing clear that I've found yet, so I'm just not sure. Maybe I'll have to experiment with that myself.
@@MikeKincaid79 I also searched on the web and couldn't find anything. I'm pretty sure it will be successful. However, for how long. I guess I'm going to have to experiment with it. Thanks
Hi Mike
Great video
Im in NSW Australia (2 hours from Sydney). After you exposed the roots, do you replant them. Do you have a video on that
Thanks Steve
Yes, you can replant them. I don't normally expose the roots though. I only did this for video purposes and to show how well they rooted. Normally, you would just leave them alone and let them continue to grow.
Lol I did this last fall. Just cut and stuck in the garden. Now I have grapes everywhere. I wish I had the same luck with Quince. I keep stealing my cuttings from my neighbors ...no Bueno. Any ideas?
Never tried rooting quince.
Awesome!!! Your content is priceless! Thanks!!!
Glad to help!
Mike,
That is a great demo! I just bought some of the very same kind of hormone you are using here. Question: can I root grape vines in mid April in Texas or is it too hot already? I may have missed it, but what is the time frame it took to root those vines?
They root in about 6 to 8 weeks. As far as rooting them in April, it depends on if the new growth has already started and how far along it is. It's best to get them started right before the new growth emerges.
I'm trying out rooting hormone vs raw honey and seeing which one works the best. Wish my luck! And thanks for the video.
Good luck, Anne!
Do u know how to root Italian cypress tree cuttings with the rooting hormone powder cause I’m having a hard time with them
Root them like I root the green giants. Start in the early spring before new growth starts. th-cam.com/video/cBUfJ_3bmBA/w-d-xo.html
Consistently awesome content! How often did you water them once potted? I'd imagine hardwood cuttings didn't need much.
Thanks so much, Sean! I actually watered them about every other day just to keep lots of moisture in the pot and around the cuttings. You can get away with watering them so much because they aren't in a sealed container and have plenty of air flow around them. Make sure to have a good draining medium too.
@@MikeKincaid79 should I do that with sand too?
it was very interesting and use full , could we do this in Summer or fall ?
Yes, just make sure to cut the green growth off and use hard woody material.
How often did/should one water these?
. Can we propagate these cuttings in the Fall inside a greenhouse, or it must be done only in the late Winter time? I've got some cuttings, but not sure if I did the propagation now, will work out too.
Yes, you can do this at any time through the late fall and winter. I prefer the late winter because they will root and then have all summer to grow big and healthy. If you root them now in a greenhouse, you have to manage them all winter with a heat and light source. You can also just stick the cuttings now and wait for them to root when the weather warms. I'm not sure what the advantage of that would be.
Do you need to water them after the initial potting and watering?
Yes, I keep the cuttings moist as they're rooting.
So wait until the grape vine is dormat in the winter or can you cut them at any time in Pennsylvania thanks
Wait until just before they break dormancy in late winter.
@MikeKincaid79 February or March sorry I'm new to this thanks
Would you recommend rooting the plants individually in order to not disturb the soil when planting them?
You could definitely do that. The advantage of putting them all in one pot is it saves time, space, and material. I wait until late winter to up-pot, when the roots are dormant and tough so it’s not a problem.
You could definitely do that. The advantage of putting them all in one pot is it saves time, space, and material. I wait until late winter to up-pot, when the roots are dormant and tough so it’s not a problem.
Hi. I received a large concord vine (5ft??) on a mature woody stalk in a large nursery pot. It came from a very overgrown bush at leat 30 ft tall, crawling up a tree.. It has 3 small bundles of unripe grapes on it. Its July in Ohio. Can I keep it in the container during winter in an attached unheated garage until spring? Should I try to prune it this year? I can keep it outside but didn't want to have it buried in snow. Thank you!!
Yes, you can store it in an unheated garage or shed and it should do just fine. Make sure to keep the soil moist through the winter (but not soaking wet). I prune my grapes in late winter.