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Thanks so much for the Video… I tried so many times to propagate roses, but no success. I will definitely try your method and see ~thanks again😘
ОтветитьThanks, very well explained. Also interesting.
ОтветитьThank you for your clear and precise video on this ! Really excellent. How long do you keep the cuttings in the outer box ? Till spring?
ОтветитьHi I do enjoy your videos. Are u saying in this video degrees C or F??
ОтветитьThanks for shareing
ОтветитьYours is the first video I watched on hardwood cuttings! My neighbor said I could take some cuttings of her “Lady Gardener” and “Barbra Streisand.” Yay. My next project, wish me luck! 🍀😉
ОтветитьThanks for another video with good information, I’m really learning a lot from your stuff. I hope to start a food forest and nursery. Blueberries are up at the top of the list because of low water ph. I’ll look to see if you have a video on trees.
ОтветитьWondered if it would make any difference if you waxed the top end of your cuttings to stop them drying out?
ОтветитьGenius
ОтветитьAnother good method
ОтветитьThank you
ОтветитьSo you showed how you cut the pencil size shoot and placed it in the carton, but can you take more than one cutting from one stem or can you take multiple cutting from the same stem?
ОтветитьHey how far down do we cut xx
ОтветитьHi Jason, mate I had someone say that Climbing roses only bloom prolifically on the secondary shoots of the plant, so my question is, " taking cuttings from which to propagate a climber, should I take them from a primary shoot, the one coming from the base, OR should I take a cutting from the secondary shoots coming off the primary shoots. TIA. Interested in your response.
ОтветитьThis is such an eye opener ... my mind is BLOWN! I am not into roses, but I'm trying to propagate a number of woody plants ... vines, shrubs, trees, some of them broadleaf evergreens. I have learned many things from last summer's failures with my softwood and semi-hardwood cuttings. Now I am eagerly awaiting the dormant season here in North Carolina. I knew there was some reason I was saving those stacks of Chinese carryout containers. I have high hopes ... wish me luck!
ОтветитьYou are so inspiring!
Thank you for showing me there is a possibility to propagate my roses near winter! 😊
So once you have callous tissue, what’s your process then to get to the pot and roots? Directly plant into soil or any special techniques?
ОтветитьHello, the jewels started to appear on the bottom and up, is that normal, thanks
ОтветитьHi, do you usually wait until roots appear or plant them in this stage? Thanks
ОтветитьHi Fraser, it’s late February and having returned to Spain after winter found my unpruned roses have already just started to shoot. I’d dearly like to prune and propagate. What’s your advice about method at this stage of development? Your straightforward insights are always appreciated!
ОтветитьThis is helpful !
ОтветитьHopefully I can keep my calloused rose cuttings alive (got some from a bouquet 💐 so I'm excited)
ОтветитьIT WORKED! I'M SO HAPPY! THANKYOU JASON! MAY GOD BLESS YOU AND PROVIDE FOR ALL YOU LOVE! I took a super long cane in febuary and cut it into 40 and got 13 proper, big healthy plants with roots and lots ot leaves ready to go in the ground (one went out in z10 May and is flourishing) six nice plants from fatter than pencil thick, four from pencil thick, and three from skinny cuttings. The other skinny semi hardwood cuttings nearly all failed (few roots and blackened) some are struggling. They are from a medium sized fragrant pale pink bud to full white cluster rose with dark green foliage that has been here since at least the 1960s, along with an enormous fragrant white banks rose canopy and peach lady hillingdon arch rose. I'm looking forward to propagating them too. THANKS AGAIN!
ОтветитьShould the outer container be dark, or does it matter?
Ответитьwhat's the purpose of the plant cooler? Never seen one before :)
ОтветитьI've just seen a video about rose propagation with hips and a banana, I knew it was a bit weird, next thing people will be claiming they have grown a money tree, thanks for proving them to be fake, all the best from kieron
ОтветитьThis is pretty cool I may have to try this but I do need to know what you do next 😊
ОтветитьThanks for true info. What brand of root hormone do you use or prefer to use ?
ОтветитьHow can I propagate rose cuttings in water?
ОтветитьThanks Jason, i will try it right now as winter season is at its peak.
ОтветитьI wonder how one can own and operate a farm at a young age like you? Did you inherit the farm from your parents and also inherit the knowledge they had collected during their lifetime?
ОтветитьHow often do you water your cuttings in your greenhouse in the winter?
Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us. I got some cuttings from someone dear to me and most of them died I am trying to figure out what I did wrong :-(
Hey Jason from experience cuttings will grow much faster if you keep the rooting side down and the leaf side up. Otherwise the hormones may be in the wrong places and it takes time for the plants to adjust. This has just been my experience and that's been with more softwood and succulent cuttings and I wonder if it applies here.
ОтветитьHi Jason, I am in Connecticut, zone 7a. The day time temperatures are now between 44 and 50 F . Should I try this method to root some hardwood cuttings? I have rooting hormone Clonex and Dip n Grow. Which one should I use to root these hardwood cuttings?
ОтветитьHi Jason, I was wondering if you have perfected the your techniques how often to spraying and when to root them after they have formed calluses?
ОтветитьThanks it work for me
Ответитьwill try this...mygreathanks and blessings
ОтветитьCan you please do a video tutorial how to do thornless roses and tree roses thanks
ОтветитьFirst Question: What's your favorite rose?
Second Question: Do you only take one cutting per semi-hardwood rose branch you take?!?! I see that there is plenty more of the branch left after you take your cutting, would that section not work to also turn it into a cutting?!?!
Sorry so once you get a callus , then you put them into a potting soil / peat moss medium?
ОтветитьInteresting. I've looked at loads of vids about taking cuttings, learn something every time. My success rates vary from 50% to 0%! So this year, I have included lots of little details from different presenters. Here in the UK high temps are not usually a problem, but getting the humidity right is, so I have made myself a simple raised cold frame where I can check them regularly. Some commentators tell you to take off all the leaves, some say leave one small leaf - my preference, so I can see if they are drying out to quickly. Some say remove thorns & brush rooting powder on the soft tissue underneath, which I have done. And one suggestion - scrape off a little of the green bark, expose the white tissue & brush on powder, for more roots. Certain varieties root easily, others not so. I left some Veilchenblau prunings on the ground by accident & they rooted. If I remember, I'll let you & readers how I get on. And if they all die, I'll 'fess up.
ОтветитьI’m so happy to have found this channel. I would like to propagate some roses in my own garden ‘ see what happens.
Thank you so much, Jason!!
Hi
ОтветитьPut some moist perlite in that large bin
ОтветитьHi Jason, I kept few hardwood cuttings from my garden roses wrapped in damp paper towel in a ziplock bag inside a closed small cardboard box. I kept the box on my dark closet. I am opening every other day to check for molds and today I saw most of them have tiny calluses forming at the bottom. It’s 10 days now , should I wait until they form bigger calluses before planting them? Also wanted to know if I should plant them in moist organic perlite only or in moist coarse sand or any other potting media? If you can advice would be really helpful. ❤
ОтветитьHi Jason, Is it required to remove the thorns or keep it? how will it make difference while propagating?
ОтветитьI’m in Sydney, Australia (Mediterranean/sub tropical climate - don’t get any snow). After the cuttings have callused I’m wondering what the best media, temperature and light to pot them out in. I was thinking 100% perlite cause drainage is super important to stop them rotting. And do I keep them in same temperatures and humidity as the callusing step? And how much light to give them?
ОтветитьDamn Jason. You are a gem of a human! That was spot on right genius! Excellent explained. 08.07.24
Ответитьim going to try to do it in hardiness zone 13 without the tempreture control lets see what will happen 😬
ОтветитьI think I'll try adapting this for my thornless propagatees this year, specifically some blueberry and dogwood hardwood cuttings. Since they're thorn- and prickleless, I'm going to try a double-bagging setup with two gallon-sized, slide-closure plastic bags. If I roll one down to stay open (like you might see done for a bag of chips or popcorn) and place it inside the other, I should be able to maintain this same effect you're demonstrating by putting moistened paper towels in the bottom of the outer bag and stand the cuttings up in the inner bag. There'll be free airflow throughout the outer bag, but the inner bag should keep the cuttings from directly contacting the moisture. At least, I hope that will be the case.
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