She says the third week of July is a great time to save some money and make new plants from your favorite shrubs and perennials. Dirt cheap gardeners know most plants can be started from stem, root or leaf cuttings, and the secret to making new plants is to just keep cutting, poking the stems into soil and seeing if they "take" or form roots.
She said her lazy gardening method is to poke the pruning crumbs of freshly trimmed lavender, sage, ueonymous and other perennials with stiff stems directly into the moist soil near the mother plant. She pokes a half dozen stems into the ground and maybe one will survive if she remembers to water. You've got nothing to lose and new plants to gain.
Stem cuttings of shrubs are also easy to make and July is the month to take softwood cuttings of abelia, azaleas, camellia, choisya (Mexican Orange) heather, hydrangea, dogwoods, kerria, mock orange, potentilla, weigela, wisteria and any other shrubby plant that you would like to share or disperse around the garden.
Here are the three easy steps to free plants:
1. Choose a shoot of branch that is soft or pliable. It should be flexible enough to bend and not snap which is why these summer cuttings are called "softwood." Look for branches no thicker than a pencil. Snip off the soft and floppy tip growth from your cutting, leaving a stem about six inches long.
2. Next, strip off the lowest leaves and poke the stem into a pot of rooting medium. Easy-to-root shrubs like hydrangea, willow and forsythia will root if you poke them into the moist potting soil that holds your flowering annuals or perennials. As long as the soil is moist, drains freely and is not being blasted by the hot afternoon sun, the cuttings have a chance to form roots. If you're willing to put in a little more effort, fill a pot with equal parts peat moss, sand and Perlite. The peat moss keeps the mix moist while the Perlite and sand allow for free drainage so air can get to the developing new roots. Insert several cuttings into one pot so the lower half is underground and the top half of the cutting, with at least one pair of leaves, is above the soil level. Remove any leaves that will be covered with the soil, and pinch out any flower buds.
Tip: Most cuttings rot and fail due to fungal infections. Use a clean knife when you take the cuttings and make sure your pots are clean as well. Fresh potting soil or a sterile peat moss and Perlite mix helps banish the fungus.
3. Now you need to keep the rootless cuttings from wilting. Store the pot in a shaded place and keep the soil moist. Mist the foliage if it starts to wilt but do this in the morning so you don't have damp leaves overnight. Some gardeners cover the newly stuck cuttings with a plastic bag (poke a few air holes in the plastic for better air circulation). Shrub cuttings taken this summer should have roots and be ready for transplanting into the garden by next spring.
Dirt Cheap Tip: Professionals use a rooting hormone to increase the odds of their rooting success. Dirt cheap gardeners can use the natural power of willow water. Just cut up sections of willow stems (any type of willow from weeping willow to pussy willow) and soak in a small amount of water. Insert your just-cut stems into this water for 24 hours. Then pot them up and water with the remaining willow water. All willows contain salicylic acid, which is a natural rooting hormone - for free.
Some of the plants I've started are:
Lacecap Hydrangea















17 comments:
Love the color of your Mallow. I let Mother Nature root some longer stems. I forget to water, so most of the time they don't make it.
Janet You're lucky Mother Nature will do that for you. Everyone says Butterfly Bushes reseed all over too but not here. We lost that Mallow this winter - lucky I have one started that's a year old I can plant. I read somewhere that they have a short life of only 4 or 5 years and I didn't know that.
Good information. I think I will try to root some this afternoon! I had success this spring with several cuttings. Your mallow is wonderful!
Yes taking cuttings is such fun but my problem is I end up with too many and don't know where to put them all. Although shrubs stay in pots for a year or two and ok amongst my other pots until I find a home for them or an unsuspecting visitor takes one or two away. They are usually so pleased they don't realise they are doing me a favour by releaving my pot crisis.
Good reminder! I am getting ready to do some hydrangea cuttings. The problem is that it takes SO long to flowering, but that's okay. Dirt cheap like you said:)
Great post! I was going to try the false Indigo shrub.
What a great post with great ideas. I've never tried this before and I think I will on my 'Preziosa' hydrangea which I'm in love with right now. I'm going to get some rooting hormone this week.
Thank you Missy, hey that's great - glad you're going to do another one.
Too funny Joanne, I can see where room would be your problem with all of the wonderful plants you have. Clematis alone!!! Oh speaking of which, just yesterday someone was asking me if I'd ever noticed the Clematis seeds and saying how neat they were. Now I'm curious!
Yes, Tina, I think the price makes it worth it. At least your gardens are nice and full - I have so many empty spaces it seems even longer for me. But my clippings have been blooming the following spring. Better than I can say for a few of the larger plants I've bought.
Great Cathy - I'm glad I did this post. Still don't know what it is about the 3rd week though.
Thanks Catherine, I've got to go back and look at your 'Preziosa' hydrangea again to see which one it was - I think I remember but want to double check.
Wow! This post could not have come at a better time! I am going to try this in the next few day! I love free shrubs and flowers:-D
Great Heather, hope ya get lots of extras!
I have a ton of seedlings this year so haven't started any cuttings, but that is a wonderful and inexpensive way to get more plants!
That's an impressive lot of plants from cuttings. I'm interested that you took cuttings of red valerian. It came into my garden as wind-seeded plants, and at first I thought it was a good thing, but then it seeded itself with abandon and now I'm pulling it out all over the place. I do only have a small suburban plot, so I can see that in a bigger garden it would be a bonus.
sweet bay, aren't you lucky. I wish more would reseed around here. It's getting better now. I quit using Preen when I heard it sterilized the soil. It was nice though to keep the weeds under control without having to weed constantly.
Linda, that's true and I've heard others say that it reseeds well. I did get a new plant this spring from the mother plant. So I have 5 now. Maybe it will make me more. I also sell some of my plants at markets to support my habit of buying more flowers. LOL So I can always use more than what reseeds.
Great post, great tips! Thanks! I'm going to have to give this a try.
great info!!!
I have some virginia creeper rooting as we speak!
Hi Linda, the process sounds easy and you've described it well. Now if we can just make it work;-0 I do know that kerria does it's own job of instantly forming new bushes-basically all I have to do is dig up a shoot and plant it elsewhere and I've got a new bush. It takes a season or 2 to get as full as the original but it's so worth it in the spring;-) I actually tried this w/some Japanese anemone last year and didn't realize how well it would work...I now have it growing in 3 other places. It's funny, but the 'original' plant wasn't 'happy' after that--but the new ones are doing great, and 1 has already been blooming. I didn't think they were supposed to start until early fall! Our gardens never cease to amaze us, right?!
Victoria, thanks and yes, do give it a try. I don't get as many as I do but at least usually get some. Still trying to figure out my mistakes!
Tootsie, hey that's great. I'll have to look that one up I'm not familiar with it.
Jan, thanks, it doesn't always work but I do manage to get some out of what I start. Need to figure out what I do wrong on some of them. I've also heard ya should put them in the dark for better (or faster?) results. But I've already taken over the garage with 'stuff' so I don't think Bob would appreciate me taking the rest of 'his man space' with my flowers. LOL
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