8 ways to stem root successfully to get more plants

June 19, 2015

If you want to expand your flower collection, here are some essential things to know about stem rooting.

8 ways to stem root successfully to get more plants

1. Go for the perfect combination of conditions

What's needed is high humidity paired with limited indirect light.

  • Give cuttings only enough light to keep them alive and cover them with a plastic tent so the leaves don't have to replenish lost moisture.
  • Until the cuttings grow roots, they have no way to gather enough water to keep unprotected leaves provided with the water they need.
  • Try to keep humidity close to 100 per cent.

2. Start with what’s easy

  • Mint is so easy to root from stem-tip cuttings that you can grow a plant from a stem purchased at the supermarket.
  • Other easy rooters include coleus, chrysanthemum and any type of sedum.
  • Among shrubs, forsythias, hydrangeas and roses often root in only a few weeks.

3. Pinch

Cuttings need a few leaves to nourish the developing roots, but too much foliage demands more moisture than a rootless stem can provide.

  • Pinch off the lower leaves as well as any buds.
  • You will know new roots have begun to develop when new leaves appear.

4. Know that cleanliness is crucial

A severed stem is actually a gaping wound through which fungi can enter.

  • Root cuttings in sterile seed-starting mix, vermiculite or a 50-50 mixture of peat moss and sand, and make sure the containers are clean.

5. Use clay

Clay pots work well for rooting cuttings when covered with a loose, clear plastic bag, such as a produce bag, held above the cuttings with wood skewers or a wire hoop.

6. Be speedy

Speed counts, which is the main reason to use rooting powder, which contains hormones that encourage the cutting to form roots quickly.

  • Very fast rooters don't need rooting powder, but for woody, slow-rooting plants, it can mean the difference between rooting and rotting.

7. Use a natural solution

Willows and black locusts give off indolebutyric acid, a natural rooting hormone.

  • Soak pieces of willow or black locust stems in rainwater for two days and water cuttings with the solution.
  • Or simply include a willow stem in a container in which you're rooting stems in water.

8. Slip in a seed

  • Another way to supplement the root-inducing hormones in a cutting is to slit a notch in the base of the cutting, then wedge a wheat or corn seed in the notch before setting the cutting to root.

As the seed germinates, it releases hormones that help keep the cutting in a root-growing mood.

With these simple tips you can easily multiply shrubs and flowers by stem rooting, either for your own garden or to share and exchange with gardener friends.

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