Today I started taking cuttings.
The plants I boxed up on January 10th have made good growth and I reckon there are 8 shoots big enough to use:
My book explains that to take the cuttings you should cut the shoots off below the soil surface. This is because you want to end up with a quarter inch of blanched white stem at the bottom of the cutting. It also says to remove all but two leaves from the shoot to reduce water loss while roots are forming.
Roots should form first from the white part of the cutting and then from the green part.
Here's an unprepared cutting on the left and a prepared one on the right:
The book says to dibble them into a tray of JI Seed compost covered with a layer of sharp sand. Some of the sand falls into the holes and helps keep the cutting well drained and stops it rotting.
I'll be looking to fill this half-tray up (another 12 cuttings) by the end of the month.
In the meantime I've put them onto the heated propogator with the lid on. In this way I will "encourage quick rooting by means of a suitable compost, ample and constant moisture, and a little bottom heat" as advised by Mr Allerton.
The plants I boxed up on January 10th have made good growth and I reckon there are 8 shoots big enough to use:
My book explains that to take the cuttings you should cut the shoots off below the soil surface. This is because you want to end up with a quarter inch of blanched white stem at the bottom of the cutting. It also says to remove all but two leaves from the shoot to reduce water loss while roots are forming.
Roots should form first from the white part of the cutting and then from the green part.
Here's an unprepared cutting on the left and a prepared one on the right:
The book says to dibble them into a tray of JI Seed compost covered with a layer of sharp sand. Some of the sand falls into the holes and helps keep the cutting well drained and stops it rotting.
I'll be looking to fill this half-tray up (another 12 cuttings) by the end of the month.
In the meantime I've put them onto the heated propogator with the lid on. In this way I will "encourage quick rooting by means of a suitable compost, ample and constant moisture, and a little bottom heat" as advised by Mr Allerton.
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