Here is that tomato cutting today.
I noticed root primordia last night.
Now that roots have started growing, I think progress will be fairly fast.
Here is that tomato cutting today.
I noticed root primordia last night.
Now that roots have started growing, I think progress will be fairly fast.
This is the Supersweet-100 cherry tomato that I bought yesterday but didn't plant yet. Overnight, something ate the stem. I blame a slug.
Tomato plants are famous for growing roots from the stems, easily. I will try to water-root the top.
I cut it with a single-edge razor for a clean cut.
Then, into water.
I'll keep it in my East - facing window and see what happens.
Meanwhile, here is the gaping wound.
I placed the cut iff "stump" outside with my other plants. If it was planted above the cotyledon level, maybe it will regrow. But I doubt that.
This climbing rose was grown from a "stick cutting", started three or four years ago. Two years ago, it had a set-back when I dug it up and moved it to its current spot. It lost most of its roots in the process. Now it's too tall for me to reach the top. There were a couple of meager flowers last year. Now or's covered with buds, and is among the first two blooming (Miniroses, kept growing all winter, are different of course).
Something tells me this is "Climbing Nr. Lincoln" but I'm not certain.
This rose is in its second Spring in my hands. I planted it as a bare root, mail order, last year. The variety is "Tropical Lightening".
I think there was more yellow / orange last year, in the variegated areas. It's also covered with buds.
I overwintered the Brugmansia in the garage with no watering at all. Last month it bloomed, despite having no leaves.
I got it out and lightly pruned the top stems. There are many growth buds.
I have watered it several times, to rehydrate the soil. I don't want it to grow much larger, so I'm not sure about fertilizing. It probably needs a larger container.