Thank you. You can use any cup for propagation. The main things you want to keep in mine: keep the cutting moist, keep the cuttings in shaded area. I got those cups from my insurance company and it comes with basil seed and a growing medium. I thought be useful sometime down the road so I kept them.
@@ninelinks3443 do they have a name on the? I would like to buy some.. thought they were pretty cool, I am going to propagate my tea olives and looks like a great growth medium too.. .I looked at home depot and the like, didn't see them
I am in South Carolina and have 2 five foot high tea olives outside my bedroom windows that are about 4 years old. I have wanted to try propagating. Ising your method, I hope to have success, and wish you luck on yours. I have the white plants. The orange ones must be heavenly! Where in New England are you located? I am originally from southern Maine. Love you tiny assistant!
Thank you, I am in kansas not close to England. The propagation is a success for me so far. Sweet olive is one of those lucky trees in our culture; therefore, this is the only plant that I have all the main varieties(orange, scarlet, gold, white). My dream is have a place in the south as well and be able to plant all my tropical plants in ground. Wish you luck 🍀.
One of mine died too the other one is ok. I think the branch you cut off needs to be bigger for higher success. The one I have that is dead is the smaller one. So for me lesson learned: use more mature branch. Did you use root hormone? You water often?
@@ninelinks3443 yes I found little cups like your, for rooting and I took the tender née growth from the top of tree. Urea to root hormones I repeated the experiment this time I left the outside I did some cutting of a Gardenia and about 1/2 are doing well. Looks like the new cutting off the tea olive are dead too I also tried a mature branch since I was cutting it back from house Look like Gardenia 4 tea olives 0 (I used potting soil on the outside experiment)
Hmmm, this method seems to work well on some plants but for sweet olive might not be as good. I am going to try something different, I have few more branches on my sweet olive I am going to try. I be making another video as experiment on the new method. Again sorry for you losses on cuttings. Thanks for helping out.
What a good assistant! Thank you for such patient and complete information.
Thanks for sharing. Should they be placed under the sun or in a shade?
All cuttings should be in shade. In sun would stress it out even more and possibly dying.
where did you find the propagation cups...?? great video! and cute little helper
Thank you. You can use any cup for propagation. The main things you want to keep in mine: keep the cutting moist, keep the cuttings in shaded area. I got those cups from my insurance company and it comes with basil seed and a growing medium. I thought be useful sometime down the road so I kept them.
@@ninelinks3443 do they have a name on the? I would like to buy some.. thought they were pretty cool, I am going to propagate my tea olives and looks like a great growth medium too.. .I looked at home depot and the like, didn't see them
The name is self watering planter and new medium I used is new Zealand premium sphagnum moss.
I am in South Carolina and have 2 five foot high tea olives outside my bedroom windows that are about 4 years old. I have wanted to try propagating. Ising your method, I hope to have success, and wish you luck on yours. I have the white plants. The orange ones must be heavenly! Where in New England are you located? I am originally from southern Maine. Love you tiny assistant!
Thank you, I am in kansas not close to England. The propagation is a success for me so far. Sweet olive is one of those lucky trees in our culture; therefore, this is the only plant that I have all the main varieties(orange, scarlet, gold, white). My dream is have a place in the south as well and be able to plant all my tropical plants in ground. Wish you luck 🍀.
I did step by step your method and mine all died. How are yours doing?
One of mine died too the other one is ok. I think the branch you cut off needs to be bigger for higher success. The one I have that is dead is the smaller one. So for me lesson learned: use more mature branch. Did you use root hormone? You water often?
@@ninelinks3443 yes I found little cups like your, for rooting and I took the tender née growth from the top of tree. Urea to root hormones
I repeated the experiment this time I left the outside
I did some cutting of a Gardenia and about 1/2 are doing well. Looks like the new cutting off the tea olive are dead too
I also tried a mature branch since I was cutting it back from house
Look like Gardenia 4 tea olives 0 (I used potting soil on the outside experiment)
Hmmm, this method seems to work well on some plants but for sweet olive might not be as good. I am going to try something different, I have few more branches on my sweet olive I am going to try. I be making another video as experiment on the new method. Again sorry for you losses on cuttings.
Thanks for helping out.