This spring I stuck cuttings of sedums, and a start of sempervivum, into this planter by the mailbox. 7.28.2020 |
Showing posts with label sedum cuttings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sedum cuttings. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 28, 2020
Sempervivum and Sedum. 7.28.2020
This Spring I stuck a lot of cuttings from Sedums I had around the yard, into this planter by the mailbox. I also planted a start from the Sempervivum from my parents (grandparents before them). I think this is one of my favorite garden details now. The sedum cuttings take almost no effort - just cut pieces from the old plants, use a stick to make holes and stick the cuttings into the holes. I barely even watered them.
Monday, May 11, 2020
Succulent Planter. 5.11.2020
This planter is made from 2 rows of re-used cinder-type tree ring edgers, one row stacked upside down and the other right side up. This year I planted Sempervivum and carious sedum cuttings and divisions, for a completely free, dry tolerant planter. This won't need much, if any watering and will look nice all year. For sedum cuttings, I just pull off or cut pieces from plants that need thinning or trimming, 3 to 6 inches long. I use a stick to make a hole, stick the stem into the hole, firm it, and water. That's all they need.
Labels:
Frugal gardening,
sedum cuttings,
sempervivum
Thursday, March 03, 2016
Propagation Projects, Progress Report. 3.3.16
Pink Ornamental Cherry, whip / tongue 3.3.16 |
Single Pink Ornamental Cherry, whip / tongue 3.3.16 |
Ginkgo whip / tongue. 3.3.16 |
Ginkgo whip / tongue 3.3.16 |
On the past 2 days, I grafted scion from ornamental cherries onto wild cherry root stock. The root stocks were volunteers in the yard, likely sweet cherry or descendents from sweet cherries.
It was difficult to identify scion that was not already too far along. The main tree is an ancient - in suburban terms - double flowered, fringed, pink Japanese cherry. Very beautiful. From the rootstock of that tree, are growths that bloom much earlier, pink prolific single flowers. That one is even more advanced, fully blooming. There were some 1-year growths that have mildly swelling buds, so I used one of those.
If the flowering cherry scion don't take, I can alllow growth of the wild cherry root stocks from below the grafts, and try T-budding this summer.
I've already posted on the ginkgo tree grfts. The buds might be swelling a little. Hard to say. The trees are no further along. I tiny patch of green is visible in some buds. It takes imagination to see that.
Grape Cuttings. 3.3.16 |
Genetic Dwarf Peach Seedling. 4th year. 3.4.16 |
Sedum From Stem Cuttings, Overwintered Outdoors. 3.4.16 |
The seedling genetic dwarf peach has pink flower buds. I don't know what will happen. If the flowers take, then the peaches may be small, due to not being on a vigorous peach rootstock. If dwarfing rootstocks make for normal size fruit, them maybe own-root peaches are no smaller than their grafted counterparts. This is an experiment.
The large varietiy sedums from stem cuttings last fall are growing nicely. I kept a few inside - they dried out and died. The starts that I kept outside for the winter are growing.
Sunday, October 04, 2015
Sedum propagation. 10.4.15
Sedum propagation. 10.4.15 |
All of the large-plant sedum stem cuttings that I took 8.18.15 have taken root and grown. So it's roughly 6 weeks. They also have flower buds and growth of new stems from the base. This is true for the green-leaf and red-leaf types.
Very cool. For almost no effort, and from 2 original stems cut into shorter pieces, I now have a half dozen new sedum plants.
Two of the leaf cuttings have grown roots. It will take longer to see if they will grow. most of the leaf cuttings died.
UPDATE: These are the other sedum cuttings. Again, these are large - type sedums. Some are the type sold as "Autumn Joy". For the smaller sedums, all that is needed is cut off a bunch of pieces with a pair of scissors, insert the cut end into some soft soil, and treat them like seedlings with a little water and weeding. I've never had a sedum not-grow from that type of cutting.
More sedum cuttings. 10.6.15 |
The plan is that, once winter sets in, keep these in a sheltered place during the coldest weather, and plant in the bee border late Winter / early Spring.
Labels:
Autumn Joy,
sedum,
sedum cuttings,
Sedum sarmentosum
Thursday, September 03, 2015
Various Observations. 9.3.15
Daylily proliferations at 3 weeks. 9.3.15 |
The daylily proliferation was cut and placed in water, and when a root started forming was moved into potting soil. There was a smaller proliferation on the same stem. I separated that, and planted both into potting soil. They are in a sheltered location outside.
This was planted into potting soil 8.11.15. The original cut was made about 8.3.15, so this is about one month.
It's nice to look under the container and see some roots growing out of the holes. That way I know for sure the roots are growing. This is a cool way to start new daylily plants without disturbing the parent plant. But I do expect them to take as long as a seedling to grow to blooming size, maybe 2 to 3 years.
Roots forming from daylily proliferations. 9.3.15 |
Celeste fig cutting at 2.5 months. 9.3.15 |
Large Sedum Cutting at 3 weeks. 9.3.15 |
Large Sedum Cutting at 3 weeks. 9.3.15 |
In the end, all it took to regenerate the Egyptian Walking Onion colony was to clean up the dried out splits from the prior bed, trim them, plant, and water. Growing well. We have scallions to eat now, and plenty to overwinter.
E.W. Onions at 3 weeks. 9.3.15 |
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