Shrubs can be finicky creatures to get clippings to grow from, unless you're able to harvest them the right way and provide after-care while they grow. A few quick tips will make sure your clippings catch.
October 9, 2015
Shrubs can be finicky creatures to get clippings to grow from, unless you're able to harvest them the right way and provide after-care while they grow. A few quick tips will make sure your clippings catch.
There are a number of shrubs — the aucuba, bluebeard, and Mexican orange among them — that root poorly from hardwood cuttings, but that respond well if semi-hard material is used instead.
If you're looking to harvest cuttings in the summer, here are some tips:
Semi-hard cuttings may root more surely if they include at the base a small wedge or portion of the parent stem. This is known as a heel, and it encourages roots to form by preventing the sap, as it flows down from the leaves, from draining away into the soil.
Once the cuttings have been taken, fill a pot to just below its rim with a light soil mix meant for starting seeds. An eight centimetre (3 1/4 inch) pot should be large enough for five cuttings, a 12-centimetre (4 3/4 inch) pot can hold as many as 10. For a really large number, a box is best.
After cuttings have rooted, they need to be acclimatized slowly. Keep them in the greenhouse or frame and raise the plastic a centimetre (1/2 inch) or so, or poke a few holes in it to let in air.
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