
Ich habe das gerade gefunden und frage mich, ob ich versuchen sollte, es im Wasser zu verwurzeln? Möglicherweise muss ich es kürzen. Ich mache mir nur Sorgen, dass der Rindenstreifen fehlt. An dieser Stelle fühlt es sich supertrocken an. Oder soll ich wegwerfen?
Von: RockerChik696
4 Comments
To be honest I haven’t tried to root a woody plant yet so I’m not speaking from experience, but if I remember right I’ve read that trying to root Woody cuttings in water will tend to lead to rot before roots. Maybe try sticking it in some moist dirt instead? The strip of bark missing might cause too much moisture loss for a successful cutting but you don’t really have anything to lose by trying.
Please chime in with corrections if I’m wrong.
Probably not, you can try but I wouldn’t hold my breath
Not without a ton of help and luck.
I could only see this rooting if you cut the branches way way back, controlled humidity and put it into an aeroponics system with rooting hormone.
It will stay alive for a long time if you put it in water, but don’t expect it to root willingly.
The best way to root hardwood species is without a doubt air rooting/layering. There are a lot of good tutorials online to see how that’s done.
As someone who does a ton of evergreen cuttings…yes it will…but not like that…all the smaller pieces coming off the woody part…cut them all off and strip the needles off about the bottom 1/3rd…those are semi hardwood…they will root 100X easier than the hardwood will…use rooting compound…put in peat moss…do not fertilize…leave it in the shade…keep it watered…be prepared to wait…some evergreens can take well over a year to root…once they do you will know…they will start flushing growth like crazy…don’t be discouraged if it takes a really long time…so long as it’s still green stay the course…