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Easy
Fall Propagation
Techniques
By Michael J.
McGroarty
As a home
gardener, fall
should be a very
special time for
you. Fall is the
best season of
the year for
plant
propagation,
especially for
home gardeners
who do not have
the luxury of
intermittent
mist. The
technique that I
am going to
describe here
can be equally
effective for
evergreens as
well as many
deciduous
plants.
The old rule of
thumb was to
start doing
hardwood
cuttings of
evergreens after
you have
experienced at
at least two
hard freezes.
After two hard
freezes the
plants are
completely
dormant.
However, based
on my experience
it is beneficial
to start doing
your evergreen
cuttings earlier
than that. So
instead of doing
by the book
hardwood
cuttings youre
actually working
with
semi-hardwood
cuttings. The
down side to
starting your
cuttings early
is that they
will have to be
watered daily
unless you
experience rain
showers. The up
side is that
they will start
rooting sooner,
and therefore
are better
rooted when you
pull them out to
transplant them.
To prepare an
area in which to
root cuttings
you must first
select a site.
An area that is
about 50% shaded
will work great.
Full sun will
work, it just
requires that
you tend to the
cuttings more
often. Clear all
grass or other
vegetation from
the area that
you have
selected. The
size of the area
is up to you.
Realistically,
you can fit
about one
cutting per
square inch of
bed area. You
might need a
little more area
per cutting, it
depends on how
close you stick
the cuttings in
the sand.
Once you have an
area cleared off
all you have to
do is build a
wooden frame and
lay it on the
ground in the
area that you
cleared. Your
frame is a
simple as four 2
by 4s or four 2
by 6s nailed
together at each
corner. It will
be open on the
top and open on
the bottom. Just
lay it on the
ground in the
cleared area,
and fill it with
a coarse grade
of sand.
This sand should
be clean (no mud
or weed seed),
and much coarser
than the sand
used in play
box. Visit your
local builders
supply center
and view each
sand pile they
have. They
should have
different grades
varying from
very fine to
very coarse. You
dont want
either. You want
something a
little more
coarse than
their medium
grade. But then
again its not
rocket science,
so dont get all
worked up trying
to find just the
right grade.
Actually, bagged
swimming pool
filter sand also
works and should
be available at
discount home
centers.
Once your wooden
frame is on the
ground and
filled with
sand, youre
ready to start
sticking
cuttings. Wet
the sand the day
before you
start, that will
make it possible
for you to make
a slit in the
sand that wont
fill right in.
In this
propagation box
you can do all
kinds of
cuttings, but I
would start with
the evergreens
first. Taxus,
Junipers, and
Arborvitae.
Make the
cuttings about 4
long and remove
the needles from
the bottom two
thirds of the
cuttings. Dip
them in a
rooting compound
and stick them
in the sand
about an inch or
so. Most garden
centers sell
rooting
compounds. Just
tell them that
you are rooting
hardwood
cuttings of
evergreens.
When you make
the Arborvitae
cuttings you can
actually remove
large branches
from an
Arborvitae and
just tear them
apart and get
hundreds of
cuttings from
one branch. When
you tear them
apart that
leaves a small
heel on the
bottom of the
cutting. Leave
this heel on. It
represents a
wounded area,
and the cutting
will produce
more roots
because of this
wound.
Once the weather
gets colder and
you have
experienced at
least one good
hard freeze, the
deciduous plants
should be
dormant and will
have dropped
their leaves,
and you can now
propagate them.
Just make
cuttings about 4
long, dip them
in a rooting
compound and
stick them in
the bed of sand.
Not everything
will root this
way, but a lot
of things will,
and it takes
little effort to
find out what
will work and
what wont.
This is a short
list of just
some of the
things that root
fine this way.
Taxus, Juniper,
Arborvitae,
Japanese Holly,
Blue Boy/Girl
Holly, Boxwood,
Cypress,
Forsythia, Rose
of Sharon,
Sandcherry,
Weigela, Red
Twig Dogwood,
Variegated
Euonymus,
Cotoneaster,
Privet, and
Viburnum.
Immediately
after sticking
the cuttings
thoroughly soak
the sand to make
sure there are
no air pockets
around the
cuttings. Keep
the cuttings
watered once or
twice daily as
long as the
weather is warm.
Once winter sets
it you can stop
watering, but if
you get a warm
dry spell, water
during that
time.
Start watering
again in the
spring and
throughout out
the summer. The
cuttings should
be rooted by
late spring and
you can cut back
on the water,
but dont let
them dry out to
the point that
they burn up.
By fall you can
transplant them
to a bed and
grow them on for
a year or two,
or you can plant
them in their
permanent
location. This
technique takes
12 months, but
it is simple and
easy.
Michael J.
McGroarty is the
author of this
article. Visit
his most
interesting
website, Select
the Link below
(Free Garden
Report) and sign
up for his
jam-packed
series that will
make any
gardener better.
No one should be
without this.
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