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Currants will root quite easily in a bucket of water so I don't think it's really necessary to use rooting powder.We took hardwood cuttings from blackcurrant and rambling roses not 4 weeks ago using hormone powder and instead of putting them in the tunnel because of the chickens we had them in the conservatory they have rooted already... I wonder if I have time for more.
Is any one else on the free plant vibe?View attachment 24834View attachment 24835
They are easy to root I did that last year where the blackcurrant patch is just to make it bigger.
The children took the cuttings in the photos with our help they will be sold on there stall for £3 if your ever passing up the summit Road!?
Edit reply to jbm.
When do you take your buddleia cuttings?I have loads going spare if you're over my way...also Buddleia davidii "black knight" which have a divine fragrance in July (loved by butterflies and bees)
When do you take your buddleia cuttings?
Have you got any dog woods (Cornus)? When I prune mine later this month I often stick a few of the prunings in a slit trench. It’s not quite the right time for propagation, but a few will take.When do you take your buddleia cuttings?
cheers I half my buddleia at the end of the summer and then prune in feb/March standardising it I only have a white one that has been in the garden for 16 years I will give it agoWhen I prune them at the end of summer/autumn. You have all the material available when you prune, so it makes sense to do it then.
I went a bit stir-crazy last summer. I made far too many cuttings - box, yew, rosemary, etc. I'll probably just pot them on and give them to a local charity.
We don't have any dog wood,Have you got any dog woods (Cornus)? When I prune mine later this month I often stick a few of the prunings in a slit trench. It’s not quite the right time for propagation, but a few will take.
Clematis can be layered- pin a flexible stem to the soil, making sure the stem is covered by the soil. Leave attached to the parent plant until it roots.
Buddleia cuttings are done in the autumn. Can grow from seed in the spring.
They have done well considering the winter we have had our 4ft ceanothus is jude well all the leaves are crisp but there is life when you score a branch or bend so there's hope.Ceanothus cuttings from last autumn have survived winter in the greenhouse and are now outside
You will find your apple trees won't come true but its all part of taking hardwood cuttings I've taken some apple only a few though.I did it with our plum trees back in January. We've got a few different varieties, in our orchard. It had been abandoned for quite a few years before we bought it last year. All the trees were growing wildly, and needed taming. When pruning, I kept a number of appropriately sized branches back, and did the same as Curly.
Now, I have loads of sticks coming into bud in the greenhouse. Given that you're paying £50/60 at garden centres for small fruit trees, its quite a saving. We do plan on extending the orchard, so this will be a big help. I would take pic, but to dark at the moment.
We also need a better evergreen hedge on one side of the smallholding. So when trimming back the Laurel at home, I've done the same, and have about 400 cuttings sat in pots at the moment. They'll probably be planted out this time next year.
You will find your apple trees won't come true but its all part of taking hardwood cuttings
Haven't started on the apples yet, just the plums.
Apples will be next year. We've got some root stock growing at the moment, and will graft our favourites, and the cider apples onto them
We took hardwood cuttings . . . . . . . using hormone powder . . . . . . .
madasafish said:
Ceanothus cuttings from last autumn have survived winter in the greenhouse and are now outside
They have done well considering the winter we have had our 4ft ceanothus is jude well all the leaves are crisp but there is life when you score a branch or bend so there's hope.
d.
Yeah sorry you knew what I was talking about I didn't .Haven't started on the apples yet, just the plums.
Apples will be next year. We've got some root stock growing at the moment, and will graft our favourites, and the cider apples onto them
The bees do make ceanothus hum here's the state of my shrub and a picture of the white buddleia which is getting pruned this weekend.One of our ceanothus was half blasted and the one I took cutting from (a 1 meter high and wide bush bought as a £4 plant from Morrisons some 10 years ago) was half killed by the Beast from The East in 2018..It has made a full recovery. Another died.
The cuttings I always overwinter in a green house: I suspect it's the wind plus cold that does the damage.
As a Californian shrub, they appear half hardy. Bees love the flowers.
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