March, 2012

28 Mar 2012

East Stem Cuttings

Comments Off Grower Tips

Plants multiply in many ways, including some that can be propagated from leaves like African violets. Take a leaf with 2-4 inches of stem from the middle row of a mature plant. Roll that stem in Hormex Rooting Hormone #1 and stick it into a little pot of AV potting mix or damp sand. Keep it in humid shade until you see little plants at the base of the leaf. Pot it up, stem and all, or separate small plants and root them. Lay the babies on damp sand and mist frequently with Hormex Liquid Concentrate mixed 10 drops/1 quart of water. When a new leaf sprouts, you’ve got roots.

28 Mar 2012

Gesneriad Leaf Cuttings

Comments Off Hormex Blog

Sometimes plant families have members that do not seem to resemble each other, but when you learn how they are propagated, their useful similarities surface. African violets and Gloxinias are gesneriads, and both are best rooted from their leaves.

Besides writing about plants and growing hundreds of them in my garden, I host a weekly radio program. Spring finds me on the road with the show, traveling to garden events and retailers. Listeners come to the broadcast, where we eat donuts and drink coffee and talk plants during the breaks and afterwards. Last Saturday, a sweet lady brought in a sad African violet for me to diagnose. The leaves were perfect in size and beautiful underneath. Most of the upper leaf surfaces looked ok, but others were blotched brown. She assured me that the plant had not been exposed to direct sun, cold water, or other liquids. But its pot was a cute enamelware pot with 2 very small holes drilled into its base. The soil felt heavy and several offsets were crowding the thick stem of this troubled gesneriads. I suggested that she remove the damaged leaves, unpot the plant, rinse the roots and dust them with sulfur to deter diseases in the root zone before potting into a container that drains well and a mix made for the violets.

But first, I cautioned her, root at least 5 leaves and use Hormex to do it. Take a leaf with 2-4 inches of stem from the middle row of a mature plant. In this case, that means you do not want the newest or oldest growth, but rather some from the middle rows of leaves. Use a single blade to slice a slanted end on the stem, roll it in Hormex Rooting Hormone #1, and slip it into a little pot of African Violet potting mix or damp sand. Keep it in humid shade until you see little plants at the base of the leaf. A good way to do this is to invert a glass jar over the leaf, as long as you can remember to lift it daily for good air exchange. When the little plants appear, pot up the stem with plants attached or separate small plants and root them. Lay the babies on damp sand and mist frequently with Hormex Liquid Concentrate mixed 10 drops/1 quart of water. When a new leaf sprouts, you’ve got roots and it is time to pot up the new plant.

Big purple trumpets graced my first gloxinia and I was determined to root a leaf and did so using the process described above for African violets. While I was at it, I learned of another way to root them in water. Here’s how it works: Fill a pitcher with tap water and let it come to room temperature. Cut a circle of waxed paper (not plastic wrap) that is one inch larger around than the top of the jar and secure it to the top of the jar with a rubber band. Poke a small hole and one slightly larger in the wax paper. Cut a long stem of African violet or gloxinia and slip it into the small hole. Pour enough water into the jar to cover most of the stem without reaching the leaf. Add a drop or two of Hormex Liquid Concentrate and put the jar where it will get light but not direct sun. When you must add water lost to evaporation, add a drop of Hormex. Roots should form in less than 2 months and then you can pot up the stem as described above.

There are more gesneriads, of course, and not all will root from leaves. Two of my favorites are miniature Sinningias, Columneas (like lipstick plant), and my nominee for most overlooked of the group, Achimenes. Don’t worry – I’ll get to all of them in this blog.

 

Nellie Neal is a passionate propagator and owner of GardenMama, Inc. She advocates for gardening 24/7 at her website, www.gardenmama.com. Ask questions and comment about this blog on the Contact Us page of www.hormex.com.

14 Mar 2012

Sticking Camellias

Comments Off Grower Tips

When it’s time to get started, I take six inch long cuttings, strip the leaves off of the lower half of the cutting, make sure the lower stem is cut on a slant, roll it in Hormex Rooting Powder #3 and stick it into a damp mix of peat moss and sand or perlite. If those ingredients are not available, lightweight potting mix will do, but it must be well-watered before use and requires close attention to watering. I like to root camellias and other woody plants in small plastic pots, usually recycled 4 inch containers that have been washed in hot, soapy water and rinsed with a 1:10 solution of bleach and water.

14 Mar 2012

Camellia Propagation

Comments Off Hormex Blog

By far, most camellias are propagated with cuttings although some are multiplied with seeds and grafting. Seedling camellias vary widely, of course, and can take a decade or more to flower so they are only a method for the very patient gardener. If you have ever watched a professional camellia grafter at work, as I have, you know how truly skilled one must be to use that method.

The old man sat at one end of a bench that stretched the length of a football field. Almost pot to pot, his creations covered the expanse – a sea of quart sized pots with new grafts inside and covered with glass jelly jars. Surely so many must have taken years to produce, yet all were about the same size and it turned out he’d only been in that greenhouse for 3 months! He neatly snipped off the top of the rootstock plant and made a matching slice in the scion wood from the desired camellia variety. With grafting wax in one hand, he joined them together, added the cloche and moved on to the next. He let us try and only chuckled as we struggled to get the grafts to hold together. I was humbled to sit at the feet of a true master!

Since most popular camellias can grow well on their own roots, most of us root cuttings when we want a new plant. Besides being the simplest way to get a new plant, this method insures that the offspring will be identical and so grow and bloom in the same way as its parent. We all know someone who makes propagation look easy. That person can cut off a camellia stem at any time of the year, stick it into the ground next to the plant it came from, and dig up a rooted plant in six months. Others can leave a cut flower in a cup of water and roots will form before you know it. Trust me, these anecdotal experiences are true but sadly rare and I suggest a more conventional approach with much better odds of success.

Take cuttings of camellia when the wood is semi-hard. New growth is soft and very green, hardwood will snap easily when you try to bend it. In between is the semi-hard or summer wood, as it is also called. Take a cutting about 6 inches long, or one that has 5 sets of leaves. Some sources say to make the cut right below an emerging leaf or node and others say to cut between 2 nodes. You may also be advised to slip off the bark at the base of the cut. While these steps evolved because they helped someone get roots to grow, I cannot find a side-by-side study to compare them. I start with a 6 inch long cutting when possible, but have rooted camellia cuttings as short as 4 inches with about as much care. The diameter of the stem does not matter in this process as much as its stage of growth, but ideally, the cutting will be bigger around than a toothpick and smaller in girth than a pencil. If it is not possible to stick the cuttings right away, store them in a plastic bag in the refrigerator.

When it’s time to get growing, I take the leaves off of the lower half of the cutting, make sure the lower stem is cut on a slant, roll it in Hormex Rooting Powder #3 and stick it into a damp mix of peat moss and sand or perlite. If those ingredients are not available, lightweight potting mix will do, but it must be well-watered before use and requires close attention to watering. I like to root camellias and other woody plants in small plastic pots, usually recycled 4 inch containers that have been washed in hot, soapy water and rinsed with a 1:10 solution of bleach and water.

If you put those pots on a tray of gravel, it is a simple matter to keep the environment moist and humid without overwatering. Like the grafting gent, I know the value of increasing humidity around the cuttings and will put a tray of pots into a plastic cloche if they are to root indoors. Some gardeners put together rooting boxes just for woody plants and use only peat moss as a rooting medium. Because I live and garden where it is humid and warm most of the year, pots work better for me. I am better able to control moisture levels and can better allow for air circulation around each cutting. However you do it, remember that camellia cuttings need bright light, but cannot survive full sun any better than the shrubs themselves can.