Re: Jim's new picture links
- To: g*@hort.net
- Subject: Re: [CHAT] Jim's new picture links
- From: j* s* <j*@igc.org>
- Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 16:18:20 -0400
- In-reply-to: <011a01c46891$708186e0$05ec3544@newhvn01.in.comcast.net>
That, of course, is the sensible way to buy the stuff. Home Depot down here sells in in big bags, also. I don't know why I don't buy it that way. Just don't.
On Tuesday, July 13, 2004, at 12:25 AM, Kitty wrote:
It's always been my impression that rootone's main importance is the
fungicide, though I suppose the hormones might help.
I'd love to have a set up like that. Having it ready and waiting would make
it so much easier to take cuttings whenever it occurs to you to do so.
Whenever I have purchased perlite or vermiculite I get the 4 cu ft bag -
about as tall as Bonnie Morgan - and pour them into empty kittylitter
containers with screw on caps. This big size costs only about $11 at the
co-op rather than pay much higher $ for smaller bags.
Kitty
----- Original Message ----- From: "james singer" <jsinger@igc.org> To: <gardenchat@hort.net> Sent: Monday, July 12, 2004 4:41 PM Subject: Re: [CHAT] Jim's new picture links
Thank you, Kitty. I try. These cutting boxes--there are four of them--are made out of pressure treated 2" by 6" finished lumber, so they're about 5-1/2" deep. Each holds about two 8-quart bags of vermiculite. There are misters on the lathwork wall behind them, so they never dry out--even on our 98-degree days.
Don't know how well you can tell from the begonia pictures, but there are three stem cuttings [buried at least one node deep] and two leaf cuttings. With these leaf cuttings, I've simply buried the leaf stem and weighed it down with a glob of damp vermiculite.
I have done real leaf cuttings of begonias in the past. The best way to
do those, I've found, is to flatten the leaf on the vermiculite and pin
each of the ribs in the leaf down firmly [it's the last remaining use
for hair pins, I think], then slit the leaf tissue between the ribs.
I always use RooTone, not because I believe it works, especially, but because it contains a fungicide. I think that's a necessary precaution with misted beds.
The green leaves in the same cutting box, incidentally, are rubber vine
[Cryptostegia grandiflora] cuttings, which are turning out to be not so
easy to root.
On Monday, July 12, 2004, at 10:22 AM, Kitty wrote:
The begonia is wonderful, and interesting how you root things. AppearsJim is a wiz at propagation and since he can do it year round, it makes
you do not do it individually potted? How deep is that bed?
sense to have an installed propagation bed. Here I have to do
temporary,
makeshift things, so containerized propagation makes more sense.
Nice pics, Jim. I've been meaning to prop some begonia leaf cuttings,
but I
was going to do it with parts of leaves. How were yours done?
Kitty
----- Original Message ----- From: "Donna" <justme@prairieinet.net> To: <gardenchat@hort.net> Sent: Sunday, July 11, 2004 11:03 PM Subject: [CHAT] Jim's new picture links
For your viewing pleasures, Island Jim has sent over three of his new
plants pictures. You can find them here:
http://simplymyworld.com/jimphotos.htm
They are the first three entries on the page, also dated 7-11-04.
Love the variegated taro... looks like a keeper, too bad not hardy here.
The begonia is wonderful, and interesting how you root things. Appears
you do not do it individually potted? How deep is that bed?
Is that ginger variegated on the leaf tips? Suppose that's not hardy here either:(
Donna
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