An Effective and Easy Technique for Rooting Rose Cuttings and Having An Endless Collection
Cuttings are an essential method of vegetative propagation for gardening enthusiasts. It offers you the possibility of successfully cloning your best rose bushes. Those that flower profusely or the most fragrant depending on your convenience.
So, if you want to create beautiful rose beds or border your garden paths with this type of flowering shrubs in shimmering colors, you will be happy to learn that cutting rose bushes is disconcertingly simple, provided you follow the instructions. good method. Here are some tips from the pros and how to proceed.
Cut cuttings approximately 20 cm long. Remove excess leaves, leaving 2 or 3 leaves on each at the top.
Using a sharp, sterilized cutter, make 2 oblique cuts in the lower part of the cuttings, as if you were sharpening the base (like the tip of a pencil). This will further stimulate the cutting to develop roots.
Make holes in the bottom of plastic bottles using another suitable tool. They will help remove excess water.
Put sand in the bottles. Insert the cuttings through the neck of the bottle and press them into the sand. A 5 liter bottle can hold approximately 4 cuttings.
Wet the sand in the bottles abundantly with standing water.
Cover the bottles with their lids and seal them tightly. Put them in a place where you can keep them while the cuttings are rooting. It should be bright but protected from direct sunlight and strong drafts. You will thus have a sort of mini-greenhouse for your cuttings.
As the humidity in the bottles decreases (depending on weather conditions), add water, but do not overdo it. In 10 days, the cuttings will release their first new leaves.
And in a month you can take them out of the bottles, cutting them beforehand and checking the roots. If all the optimal conditions are met (temperature, light, timely watering), the rose cuttings will develop strong roots and can be planted in their final location.