Propagate Plants Using Stem Cuttings
When a plant is successful in your garden, chances are you will want more of it. To save money, learn to propagate your favorite plant. Propagation is simply the production of more plants by using seeds, cuttings, or root division. Many plants can successfully be propagated using stem cuttings. These include hibiscus, wisteria, clematis, forsythia, butterfly bush and lilacs -- along with many more. In stem propagation, roots will develop from a section of stem cut from a parent plant, developing into an independent plant, exactly like its parent. Does this Spark an idea?
Instructions
1. Clip a 4- to 6-inch section from current or the past season's growth on an established plant.
Stem cuttings chosen from the upper part of the plant works best. Also, cuttings taken from lateral shoots work better than those taken from terminal shoots. Remove any flowers or flower buds, so the energy can be used to produce new roots, rather than new flowers.
2. Remove any leaves or buds from the lower third of the cutting. The leaf-free or bud-free area of the stem cutting is the part that will be put into the ground or into a pot.
3. Dig a hole several inches deep and place the bottom of the stem cutting into the hole, if you are planting directly into the ground outside. Replace the soil or dirt around the newly planted stem cutting. To plant in pots, simply fill the pots with a peat-based potting mix and place the stem cutting into the soil.
4. Water the stem cutting moderately, inside or out. The soil should be moist, but not too wet. A spray bottle works well for watering without wetting the soil too much. While waiting for the stem cutting to root, continue watering as the soil becomes dry, but be careful not to over-water. You should see new growth in about a month. However, rooting time varies with the type of cutting, the species being rooted, and environmental conditions.
5. After new growth is present, you may move the rooted stem to a permanent location, or you may allow the propagated stem to remain in its current location. If you potted your stem cutting, allowing the new rooted stem cutting to grow larger might be a good idea before planting it into the ground.
Tags: stem cutting, into ground, cutting into, into hole, Plants Using Stem, Propagate Plants, Propagate Plants Using