This week The Wrigglers #cartoons are going to squint at taking #plant semi-ripe cuttings. Apparently there 100 ways to propagate your plants… Semi-ripe cuttings is one you can do now!
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The Wrigglers #cartoon for #plant semi-ripe cuttings. Imagine a stick talking to you …
If interested in stick insects trammels out sightings in the UK: http://phasmidstudygroup.org/phasmids/uk-phasmid-sighting
Coming when to the point, this storyboard is just to explain a wearing is any part of the plant that doesn’t have roots. You can propagate these and grow increasingly plants, for free!
There are some links unelevated that show you exactly what to do to take your semi-ripe cuttings.
Semi-ripe cuttings are made using this year’s stems, when they are woody at the wiring and soft at the tip. It’s the nonflexible wiring that makes the cuttings less likely to rot while the roots are taking.
Reason for doing this now is that plant hormone levels are upper in the storing months, so should root and grow well!
The worms are propagating a hebe in this cartoon. Top plants to propagate from cuttings in storing include: Salvias, Culinary Sage, Box, Rosemary, Penstemons, Lavender.
Gardener’s World translating on How to use Rooting Hormones
In this link Garden fundamentals offer some insight – Semi-ripe cuttings – What Are They?
Semi-ripe cuttings – from Sue Jeffries, a trained horticulturalist and teacher based in Lancashire
Gardening know how, gardeningknowhow.com Using Honey as an volitional to Rooting Hormone powder