Kurt.. AWESOME VIDEO I've watched many, and you have done the best in describing in great detail the basics. Your approach with the 2 styles and showing the simplicity is outstanding. THANK YOU
Been watching a lot of videos about this lately. I have a bunch of those pods as well and want to start doing apple trees. There are tons of wild apple trees around here and I want to start my own orchard. Thanks for sharing!
Craigslist or co-operative for residential Tree & plant enthusiasts only ,buy sell trade. Who can afford plant nurseries? 15 gallon trees starting @ $250.00. This engineered Inflation scam is outrageous! Cool plan, EE's cool.
great video, now i KNOW i can do this. there are old apple trees that i'm going to do this with, they're from an old homestead; everything else is gone, but not these delicious apples. soon i'll be growing these trees on my homestead, thanks Edibles And Exotics LLC!
Thank you for your very detailed clear instructions to air layer, it makes such a positive difference when it is explained so thoroughly. Thank you so much. Your a great instructor!!!
Love this. I'm also in the East Valley and hoping to try this on my pomegranates and citrus. Now I just need to get up the nerve to ask a neighbor, with a very well established Fig, if I can do this on their tree ! LOL
Thanks! If you do some air layers, I would wait until the temps come down into the lower 90s. I have some air layers that are doing good but not rooted out enough, and in this heat, they aren't doing much. I've also lost a couple from last spring with these rediclous temps. I know it sucks having to wait, but it will work out better. 😊 Keep us posted on how they do!
I've never heard about air layering before so I searched for a video. Yours is the first one and it was really great. Thank you. I feel like I learned a lot.
I'm in Mesa, Arizona, and I love doing do lots of airlayerings. I like the pods that are clear at least on one side, so you can see the roots, without removing the pod to look. I also volunteer at a community garden near McKellips and Mesa Drive. I take several of the airlayerings there to plant.
@@edibles_and_exotics Right now I have airlayerings on Lemon, Ice Cream Bean, Strawberry tree, Navel Orange, Indian Cluster Fig, Barbados Cherry, Zutano Avocado, White Asian Guava, Ruby Supreme Guava, Bartlett Pear, Macadamia, and Sabara Jaboticaba.
What a complete explanation man.wish you do videos on everything else ..you excellent and your voice is so calming and soothing ..love your videos thanks so much may good keep you strong so much
Thank you so much for sharing this information. I have a lemon tree and it split at the trunk, now a shoot has sprouted from the trunk and now I’m going to try to air layer it
Excellent video thanks for the great details. I’m hoping to do some air layering next spring with oaks and chestnuts. Planning to use 2.5 gallon ziplock bags to allow max root development before removing from tree. Bags are less than 50 cents each on Amazon, so cheap enough.
Thanks for watching! Yeah for the bigger brilanches I use the big zip locks too. Just make sure you get long zip ties. It's way easier if they are too long then just bearly long enough. Maximum root development is deffenatly the way to go! If you are doing big air layers make sure you have stakes and something to tie them up with because they have a tendency to twist and lean when potted up which can brake the tender roots off the branch and kill the air layer. If you are doing smaller branches smaller bags are better. They won't weigh down the branch and you can monitor the root growth better. If air layers are left on too long they have problems with drying out and not doing so good.
Excellent. I have found layering early spring is just after bud break is ideal. I live in a cooler and wetter environment. I use sphagnum moss. I find the xylem delivers plenty of moisture. I’m in San Francisco with very different weather. I find 5” stretch wrap is one of the easiest materials to cover the layer. Try using scissors or shears to cut the bark. Just open the scissors and twist. For junipers some people claim girdling with a wire or zip tie is better than cutting the bark.
In a cooler climate, early spring is a great time here in the phoenix metro area. we usually go from winter to summer in a couple of weeks, not enough time for the air layer to take. I mostly do them in late fall which gives enough time for the air layers to root out, be removed and put in a pot to root out the pot before spring comes and as temps warm up its fully rooted out and ready to fruit and grow! I have tried the plastic wrap but don't have much luck with it, as I mostly do it alone and use peat moss.
thanks for the video. I am going to try this and this is the best explanation by far. I am in Canada and it is late spring. I am going to try apple tree and a couple shrubs. I hope there is enough time for them to root before winter.
You should be totally OK in late spring just keep them in the shade for the summer and then get them used to full sun in the fall don't rush it just let them do their thing.
Hey Man great video, love the details you include for us that are new to growing stuff, I want to propagate a great tangerine tree my neighbor has if I air layer it will it fruit?, I also have seeds from this tangerine tree, what’s the best approach?, thanks.
Thanks for the complement, it made my day! If you air layer it, it will be a clone of the mature tree, so it should fruit right away for you, all be it not a big crop unless you do a real big air layer. It may take time to grow big enough to put out a decent sized crop. From seed, it's probably not going to produce a tree that's true to type, meaning it probably won't produce the same fruit as what the seed came from. I would stick with the air layer it's your best bet!
Beloved thank you i dont have any fancy stuff i did it before and used ordinary soil with horse manure thats well cured and i had good results so i plant to keep right on doing this.
@PewPewDoc I check them and if they are going dry I will add a little water. Most of the time I air layer in fall winter and spring so they usully stay damp enough. Summer is just too hot for me unless it's an emergency.
Excellent video - learned more than any I have watched - one question one the wrap though is the shinny side in or on the outside? May not make a difference but I was curious.
In summer, I would do shiny side out to reflect more heat in winter shiny side in to absorb some heat. Thanks for watching, and thanks for the compliment!!!!
It depends on the time of the year and how warm it is outside. Ideally, air layers should be done when night time temps are above 50°f and when the tree is activly growing, which in my area is about 3 to 4 weeks away from now. They can be done any time of the year but on a dormant tree they won't root out until the tree wakes up and starts growing. During the grow season depending on the type of tree and the size of the air layer it could take from 3 weeks to 2 months.
Hi I live in California and the average temperature where I live is between 68 and 72° so I was wondering do you think I need to wrap my mine in foil also like you do in Arizona?
I want to thank you from r showing me several ways to do Airlayering . I have med green pods andsy be hard to see into. I may try 1 pod and 1 plastic bag. For my Ruby Red Grapefruit tree. I do have 2 questions. Can I graft a cutting using the pods/ pladtic bag as well? Plus I have sphagnum moss can I use this for rooting and do I still need to add soil? I live in central FL and it's April and already 90 plus degrees. I'm worried about it all drying out. Thinking that the moss will hold the moisture. Thank you
I'm nor sure what you mean by grafting? As far as the temps go if your humidity is high enough you should be OK as long as you give the airlayered branches shade.
Yes, i do it all the time! If you watch my tissue culture mulberry tree video, you will see I have a few air layers on one branch. Most are side shoots and main branches, but you can airlayer the same branch if you leave enough space between each rooting spot.
@@edibles_and_exotics I'm starting with my Mother in laws fig tree and get enough air lawyers so that I can get at least five, for my sisters in law. I'll record the "EXPERIMENT" (I'm a STUMBLING GARDNER) and send it to you.
@Juan Rios awesome! Figs root out fast through air layers! I bet all will be successful. Just make sure not to rush it and cut them off too soon, look for lots of roots before removing it.
Thanks again your awesome for answering all of my questions, I just subscribed to your channel I really appreciate all of your help. I just got my air layer kit and I'm going to air layer a few branches on my Fig tree on Friday, do I need to take off all the leaves on the branches that I air layer on? Thanks again in advance! :)
@@SharkManHD no just where the air layer bag or pod is, the rest of the branch just stays as it is. You're so welcome for any help I was able to give. And thanks so much for subscribing!!!!! I hope to start filming again this weekend and getting some new content posted. The next video is going to be on growing banyan trees in the desert.
@@edibles_and_exotics thanks for the reply, it's good to know. I may add some peat to it which I have a huge bag of it, but it's not the spaghnum kind. I'm not sure what the difference is between the two. I'm not a garden person. I only got into this after I retired so I'm trying to learn but it's difficult to remember all the stuff I've been watching on UA-cam from Bonsai to building a pond and everything in between.
Hello I did a couple of branches on a lemon tree at a friend's house and when I came back the bag of soil and roots were kinda dry but I cut the branch anyway and put in a container with soil will that cutting work if rhe bag of soil and roots were dry the branch was very healthy with fruit on it I just cut it 2 days ago
@edibles_and_exotics thank u for the reply I will keepnin shade and keep an eye on the leaves if they do start to wilt is there anything I should do & is there any fertilizer I should use I have the Alaska fish emulsion 5-5-5
@rockit2664 don't fertilize for a few months until you get good top growth, and then it slows down. If you get wilting make sure the soil is draining good and then remove some leaves and possibly create a more humid environment for them but make sure you still have air flow or they will mold.
@roopmatieramkissoon1076 for figs I don't but for harder to root ones I do. I use dip and grow and brush it on with a small paint brush. I've had figs root out in less than two weeks with no horemone, but sometimes it takes a month or more like in winter.
How did you know when to open the black rooting pod if you cant see the roots? how long do you wait before you open it? I have a lime tree I want to try rooting pod on for the first time, but dont want to mess it up
On figs usully you start to see roots popping out from the top end of the pod, with a lime it may be tough, the roots are usually finer where as figs are very thick. That's why I don't use the full black pods a lot. You could also try pealing open one side to look for roots.
Fig is very easy to root. I just cut them and stick them in moist soil and keep the soil moist, you'll get roots almost 100%. Persimmon is the hardest cuttings to root. I am trying to do persimmon branch to see if it will work. Again, thank you.
Yeah fig cuttings are pretty easy that's for sure. The one that is super hard for me is Australian green mulberry. I have done lots of cuttings and air layers and they only root 5% of the time. I've never tried persimmon but I'm sure it's a tough one too.
@@edibles_and_exotics I am not sure about Australian Mulberry, but I took mulberry cuttings from someone's house I visited 2 years ago. They all got roots, like 2 or 3 months later, I forgot. I only planted 3 of them and they fruited this year. However, after I tasted them, I realized I don't like mulberries. I dug them all out last week while I could. Their roots were massive and I am glad I dug them out this year instead of waiting. They are white or light color lilac mulberries. The first time I ever had mulberries and it's the last.
@thavylor don't give up on mulberries they are awesome fruit! Are you local? If so next spring you can stop by my place and pick from the 10 varieties I have growing. They all taste different!
@thavylor I would recommend a Pakistani or morus alba those would do great there and you would fall in love with mulberries after trying either of them.
What is the purpose of the foil if you're not trying to keep it warm. Considering that the plastic is black that attracts and holes heat so you shouldn't need foil in order to keep the temp up.
Reflect the heat so it doesn't bake the roots or dry them out, while it's hot outside the ground is far cooler than the atmosphere. Roots don't like to be hotter than 75f-80f very sensitive to heat. You just don't want the sun to bake the root ball, and the hotter it is the more likely you are to develop fungi.
Random thought: really don't need so much foil over the "pod". It is just reflecting light so it doesn't cook, as you said. In my climate (north-central Florida) I'd need to be careful about the plastic bag method, to keep the open side down so it doesn't fill up with rainwater.
Here in Arizona, it gets up to 120°f in the summer, so all the protection is a must. I usually dont do much in the yard in summertime, though it's just too draining.
I do a ton of air layering but no way am I buying one for 25 or 30 bucks that size. I did an air layer on my apple tree for my daughter's house that is about 6 feet tall and maybe 3 feet wide with the zip lock bag it worked out great its leafing out right now should get apples this summer Fter being planted in her yard.
@@edibles_and_exotics so i read an article that has to do with science about houseplants and so far it said we have same amount of oxygen in the air basically
@@edibles_and_exotics so i decided not to plant my bananas this year in the ground well except maybe for one the 4 foot veinte if it reaches 6 to 7 feet within 6 months
Kurt..
AWESOME VIDEO
I've watched many, and you have done the best in describing in great detail the basics. Your approach with the 2 styles and showing the simplicity is outstanding.
THANK YOU
Thanks so much for the complement! You made my day! I'm so glad it helps let me know how it goes for you I would love to hear the results.
Thanks very kindly- once you hit into it all my questions were answered and I learned a lot. Thanks again
@@secretdad544 you're very welcome!!
Been watching a lot of videos about this lately. I have a bunch of those pods as well and want to start doing apple trees. There are tons of wild apple trees around here and I want to start my own orchard. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for watching! Let me know how it goes. I love hearing people's secuss stories!
@@edibles_and_exotics I’ll try to remember to let you know 😂 I will post updates on my channel for sure and that should be in July at some point.
Craigslist or co-operative for residential Tree & plant enthusiasts only ,buy sell trade. Who can afford plant
nurseries? 15 gallon trees starting @ $250.00. This engineered Inflation scam is outrageous! Cool plan, EE's cool.
@@Chriszlaststand thanks!
Good Job, thank you. The bag instructions were excellent.
Thanks for watching! Let me know how it goes. Yours was the comment of the day! I love it when I can help people. 😊
great video, now i KNOW i can do this. there are old apple trees that i'm going to do this with, they're from an old homestead; everything else is gone, but not these delicious apples. soon i'll be growing these trees on my homestead, thanks Edibles And Exotics LLC!
That's awesome!!!
Do a lot of them so you have extra!
Excellent Tutorial! Straight to the point, well narrated.
Thank you! 😊 I try to keep it simple and cheap.
very clear and easy to folly,thank you very much sir.God bless you more
Thanks for the kind words, and thanks for watching!!!!
Thank you for your very detailed clear instructions to air layer, it makes such a positive difference when it is explained so thoroughly. Thank you so much. Your a great instructor!!!
Thanks for the wonderful compliment, and thank you for watching!
Love this. I'm also in the East Valley and hoping to try this on my pomegranates and citrus. Now I just need to get up the nerve to ask a neighbor, with a very well established Fig, if I can do this on their tree ! LOL
Thanks!
If you do some air layers, I would wait until the temps come down into the lower 90s. I have some air layers that are doing good but not rooted out enough, and in this heat, they aren't doing much. I've also lost a couple from last spring with these rediclous temps. I know it sucks having to wait, but it will work out better. 😊
Keep us posted on how they do!
@@edibles_and_exotics I sure will, thank you!
@@KATHRYNA-g8s
Awesome!!!
I've never heard about air layering before so I searched for a video. Yours is the first one and it was really great. Thank you. I feel like I learned a lot.
I'm in Mesa, Arizona, and I love doing do lots of airlayerings. I like the pods that are clear at least on one side, so you can see the roots, without removing the pod to look. I also volunteer at a community garden near McKellips and Mesa Drive. I take several of the airlayerings there to plant.
That's great! What kind of trees do you air layer?
@@edibles_and_exotics Right now I have airlayerings on Lemon, Ice Cream Bean, Strawberry tree, Navel Orange, Indian Cluster Fig, Barbados Cherry, Zutano Avocado, White Asian Guava, Ruby Supreme Guava, Bartlett Pear, Macadamia, and Sabara Jaboticaba.
@Mel Palmer
Oh wow, you have a food forest going!!!
Air layering is great, so easy to do. Most of the plants I sell are from air layers.
Great video brother. You're about the first to mention ant problems. Love the solution and just subscribed! Keep up the good work.
Just subscribed! Your explanation is so simple and detailed. Thanks.
You're welcome. Thanks for the wonderful comment! Let me know how it works out for you!
I enjoyed watching this.
Thanks!
What a complete explanation man.wish you do videos on everything else ..you excellent and your voice is so calming and soothing ..love your videos thanks so much may good keep you strong so much
Thank you so much that comment made my day!!!
Any other videos you would like to see?
Great tutorial ❤
Straight to the point ❤
Thank you for your honesty. ❤
❤❤❤❤❤❤
Thanks! That made my day!!!!!
just subscribed your making good videos on propagation im learning alot
Thanks brother! I also subscribed to your channel I'll check out your videos tonight!
Excellent step by step tutorial lesson, thanks...!!
Thanks for the compliment, and thanks for watching!!!! I tried to keep it as simple as possible.
I have watched so many vedios, thank you for making it simple to airlay , i have 3 growing roots , they are doing amazing, thank you for your vedio.
@helenconstantinou6511 you are very welcome. Thanks for watching, and thanks for the kind words!!!
First video that explains everything ! nice job!!!!
Thanks so much for watching!
I love your videos! So practical and informative. Also love your humor!
Thanks!!! That was the comment of the day for sure. That totally made my day. Thanks for watching, I love the support!!!!!
Thank you so much for sharing this information. I have a lemon tree and it split at the trunk, now a shoot has sprouted from the trunk and now I’m going to try to air layer it
Good luck! Let me know how it goes for youbi would love to know.
Thank you that's a good idea, I just ordered some on Amazon right now! :)
Excellent video thanks for the great details. I’m hoping to do some air layering next spring with oaks and chestnuts. Planning to use 2.5 gallon ziplock bags to allow max root development before removing from tree. Bags are less than 50 cents each on Amazon, so cheap enough.
Thanks for watching! Yeah for the bigger brilanches I use the big zip locks too. Just make sure you get long zip ties. It's way easier if they are too long then just bearly long enough. Maximum root development is deffenatly the way to go! If you are doing big air layers make sure you have stakes and something to tie them up with because they have a tendency to twist and lean when potted up which can brake the tender roots off the branch and kill the air layer. If you are doing smaller branches smaller bags are better. They won't weigh down the branch and you can monitor the root growth better. If air layers are left on too long they have problems with drying out and not doing so good.
Thank you for all the details and info it all makes good sense. I look forward to trying it out.
Excellent.
I have found layering early spring is just after bud break is ideal. I live in a cooler and wetter environment. I use sphagnum moss. I find the xylem delivers plenty of moisture. I’m in San Francisco with very different weather.
I find 5” stretch wrap is one of the easiest materials to cover the layer.
Try using scissors or shears to cut the bark. Just open the scissors and twist.
For junipers some people claim girdling with a wire or zip tie is better than cutting the bark.
In a cooler climate, early spring is a great time here in the phoenix metro area. we usually go from winter to summer in a couple of weeks, not enough time for the air layer to take. I mostly do them in late fall which gives enough time for the air layers to root out, be removed and put in a pot to root out the pot before spring comes and as temps warm up its fully rooted out and ready to fruit and grow!
I have tried the plastic wrap but don't have much luck with it, as I mostly do it alone and use peat moss.
thanks for the video. I am going to try this and this is the best explanation by far. I am in Canada and it is late spring. I am going to try apple tree and a couple shrubs. I hope there is enough time for them to root before winter.
You should be totally OK in late spring just keep them in the shade for the summer and then get them used to full sun in the fall don't rush it just let them do their thing.
Love your video I learned alot. You mentioned that you can do this year round. I live in Zone 7. Do you think I can still do it year round?
Thanks for watching!!!!!
Yes, but if the air layer freezes, it may kill the roots. It usually will be rooted out by mid spring if you do it late fall.
Hey Man great video, love the details you include for us that are new to growing stuff, I want to propagate a great tangerine tree my neighbor has if I air layer it will it fruit?, I also have seeds from this tangerine tree, what’s the best approach?, thanks.
Thanks for the complement, it made my day!
If you air layer it, it will be a clone of the mature tree, so it should fruit right away for you, all be it not a big crop unless you do a real big air layer. It may take time to grow big enough to put out a decent sized crop. From seed, it's probably not going to produce a tree that's true to type, meaning it probably won't produce the same fruit as what the seed came from. I would stick with the air layer it's your best bet!
@@edibles_and_exotics perfect I’m going to try the air layering technique 🙏, thanks again!
@@J2dadoubleg let me know how it goes!
Very clear and helpful. Thanks.
You're very welcome and thanks for watching!!!!
Beloved thank you i dont have any fancy stuff i did it before and used ordinary soil with horse manure thats well cured and i had good results so i plant to keep right on doing this.
@bobmarley965 that's awesome! Thanks for the comment, and thanks for watching!!!!!
Thank you. Will definitely do this.
Awesome! Let me know how it goes!
So u dont water it at all for 4-6 weeks?
Sorry I was referring to the Air Pod Method.
@PewPewDoc I check them and if they are going dry I will add a little water. Most of the time I air layer in fall winter and spring so they usully stay damp enough. Summer is just too hot for me unless it's an emergency.
Great trainer 😊👌✅☮️
Thanks for watching!!!
Excellent video - learned more than any I have watched - one question one the wrap though is the shinny side in or on the outside? May not make a difference but I was curious.
In summer, I would do shiny side out to reflect more heat in winter shiny side in to absorb some heat.
Thanks for watching, and thanks for the compliment!!!!
Thank you
@@rnskippermiller
Let me know how it goes for you. I love hearing from viewers!
How long did you say before you should start seeing new roots?
It depends on the time of the year and how warm it is outside. Ideally, air layers should be done when night time temps are above 50°f and when the tree is activly growing, which in my area is about 3 to 4 weeks away from now. They can be done any time of the year but on a dormant tree they won't root out until the tree wakes up and starts growing. During the grow season depending on the type of tree and the size of the air layer it could take from 3 weeks to 2 months.
After applying the aluminum foil, I place one of those large plastic clips on the branch to keep the pod from slipping down the branch.
If your pod is slipping down the branch you used too big a pod or too small a branch.
Nice Totem Pole !
I get that a lot. 😀😃😄😁😆
Hi is it possible to air layering the red Robbin tree, Many thanks
You should be able to root any tree with bark. Give it a try. What's the worst that can happen?
many thanks.@@edibles_and_exotics
Thank you.
Hi I live in California and the average temperature where I live is between 68 and 72° so I was wondering do you think I need to wrap my mine in foil also like you do in Arizona?
@SharkManHD do 2 and try with and with out. If it's in shade and more humid then az it should be fine with no foil.
What is the best season to do this?
I want to thank you from r showing me several ways to do Airlayering . I have med green pods andsy be hard to see into. I may try 1 pod and 1 plastic bag. For my Ruby Red Grapefruit tree. I do have 2 questions. Can I graft a cutting using the pods/ pladtic bag as well? Plus I have sphagnum moss can I use this for rooting and do I still need to add soil? I live in central FL and it's April and already 90 plus degrees. I'm worried about it all drying out. Thinking that the moss will hold the moisture. Thank you
I'm nor sure what you mean by grafting?
As far as the temps go if your humidity is high enough you should be OK as long as you give the airlayered branches shade.
Can you "Air Layer"different sections on the same branch to get multiple rootings on one branch????
Yes, i do it all the time! If you watch my tissue culture mulberry tree video, you will see I have a few air layers on one branch. Most are side shoots and main branches, but you can airlayer the same branch if you leave enough space between each rooting spot.
@@edibles_and_exotics AWESOME, THANK YOU!!
@@juanrios9846 my pleasure!
What are you going to Air layer?
@@edibles_and_exotics I'm starting with my Mother in laws fig tree and get enough air lawyers so that I can get at least five, for my sisters in law. I'll record the "EXPERIMENT" (I'm a STUMBLING GARDNER) and send it to you.
@Juan Rios awesome!
Figs root out fast through air layers! I bet all will be successful.
Just make sure not to rush it and cut them off too soon, look for lots of roots before removing it.
Thanks again your awesome for answering all of my questions, I just subscribed to your channel I really appreciate all of your help.
I just got my air layer kit and I'm going to air layer a few branches on my Fig tree on Friday, do I need to take off all the leaves on the branches that I air layer on?
Thanks again in advance! :)
@@SharkManHD no just where the air layer bag or pod is, the rest of the branch just stays as it is.
You're so welcome for any help I was able to give. And thanks so much for subscribing!!!!! I hope to start filming again this weekend and getting some new content posted. The next video is going to be on growing banyan trees in the desert.
Thanks again and I look forward to your next video!
@@SharkManHD you're welcome.
Can you speak about the roots - how time it takes, when you cut it off, what the roots look like if they are going well? Tks
I did an update video that covers all of that.
How do you know when your air layering substrate is in need of water?
I have another question do you think I can do this to an avocado tree also?
@SharkManHD yes you can I have done it before.
Thank you so much for letting me know this, I really appreciate it a lot!!!
@@SharkManHD you're welcome thanks for watching.
will coco choir be good to use in air layering?
@@ranjanty it should work great
@@edibles_and_exotics thanks for the reply, it's good to know. I may add some peat to it which I have a huge bag of it, but it's not the spaghnum kind. I'm not sure what the difference is between the two. I'm not a garden person. I only got into this after I retired so I'm trying to learn but it's difficult to remember all the stuff I've been watching on UA-cam from Bonsai to building a pond and everything in between.
Hello I did a couple of branches on a lemon tree at a friend's house and when I came back the bag of soil and roots were kinda dry but I cut the branch anyway and put in a container with soil will that cutting work if rhe bag of soil and roots were dry the branch was very healthy with fruit on it I just cut it 2 days ago
@rockit2664 it's worth a shot. Just keep it in the shade keep the soil moist not wet, and watch that the leaves don't start to wilt.
@edibles_and_exotics thank u for the reply I will keepnin shade and keep an eye on the leaves if they do start to wilt is there anything I should do & is there any fertilizer I should use I have the Alaska fish emulsion 5-5-5
@rockit2664 don't fertilize for a few months until you get good top growth, and then it slows down.
If you get wilting make sure the soil is draining good and then remove some leaves and possibly create a more humid environment for them but make sure you still have air flow or they will mold.
I notice you didn't use any rooting hormone, would it still produce roots?thanking you in advance
@roopmatieramkissoon1076 for figs I don't but for harder to root ones I do. I use dip and grow and brush it on with a small paint brush. I've had figs root out in less than two weeks with no horemone, but sometimes it takes a month or more like in winter.
@@edibles_and_exotics I can't wait to get my hands on some rooting hormone, I want to try avocado and lemon and breadfruit as well
@roopmatieramkissoon1076 some times they don't take so don't get discouraged, just try again!
I granted a fig with apple tree and got the best fruit you'll ever eat.😊
@@vincebusinelle886 for real?
How did you know when to open the black rooting pod if you cant see the roots? how long do you wait before you open it? I have a lime tree I want to try rooting pod on for the first time, but dont want to mess it up
On figs usully you start to see roots popping out from the top end of the pod, with a lime it may be tough, the roots are usually finer where as figs are very thick. That's why I don't use the full black pods a lot. You could also try pealing open one side to look for roots.
One month, Infallible.
Did you use root hormone? I may have missed it.
No horemone used. I have used fresh aloe and also liquid rooting horemone but on figs its not needed in my opinion.
@@edibles_and_exotics does aloe act as a rooting hormone?
@MasterFalconer-pv8zb it supposedly does but I mainly use it for an anti fungal treatment so I don't get rot if it's too damp.
Fig is very easy to root. I just cut them and stick them in moist soil and keep the soil moist, you'll get roots almost 100%. Persimmon is the hardest cuttings to root. I am trying to do persimmon branch to see if it will work. Again, thank you.
Yeah fig cuttings are pretty easy that's for sure. The one that is super hard for me is Australian green mulberry. I have done lots of cuttings and air layers and they only root 5% of the time. I've never tried persimmon but I'm sure it's a tough one too.
@@edibles_and_exotics I am not sure about Australian Mulberry, but I took mulberry cuttings from someone's house I visited 2 years ago. They all got roots, like 2 or 3 months later, I forgot. I only planted 3 of them and they fruited this year. However, after I tasted them, I realized I don't like mulberries. I dug them all out last week while I could. Their roots were massive and I am glad I dug them out this year instead of waiting. They are white or light color lilac mulberries. The first time I ever had mulberries and it's the last.
@thavylor don't give up on mulberries they are awesome fruit! Are you local? If so next spring you can stop by my place and pick from the 10 varieties I have growing. They all taste different!
@@edibles_and_exotics I am in East Texas
@thavylor I would recommend a Pakistani or morus alba those would do great there and you would fall in love with mulberries after trying either of them.
What is the purpose of the foil if you're not trying to keep it warm. Considering that the plastic is black that attracts and holes heat so you shouldn't need foil in order to keep the temp up.
Reflect the heat so it doesn't bake the roots or dry them out, while it's hot outside the ground is far cooler than the atmosphere.
Roots don't like to be hotter than 75f-80f very sensitive to heat. You just don't want the sun to bake the root ball, and the hotter it is the more likely you are to develop fungi.
Hallo the tinfoil which side must be at the outside please
What is the tree are you working
Random thought: really don't need so much foil over the "pod". It is just reflecting light so it doesn't cook, as you said. In my climate (north-central Florida) I'd need to be careful about the plastic bag method, to keep the open side down so it doesn't fill up with rainwater.
Here in Arizona, it gets up to 120°f in the summer, so all the protection is a must. I usually dont do much in the yard in summertime, though it's just too draining.
those air pods sound quite expensive especially trying to get a few the size of a basketball haha i get a kick out of it !
I do a ton of air layering but no way am I buying one for 25 or 30 bucks that size. I did an air layer on my apple tree for my daughter's house that is about 6 feet tall and maybe 3 feet wide with the zip lock bag it worked out great its leafing out right now should get apples this summer Fter being planted in her yard.
@@edibles_and_exotics so i read an article that has to do with science about houseplants and so far it said we have same amount of oxygen in the air basically
@@frostylonewolf1700
Yeah pretty much true.
@@edibles_and_exotics so i decided not to plant my bananas this year in the ground well except maybe for one the 4 foot veinte if it reaches 6 to 7 feet within 6 months
@@edibles_and_exotics is there any plants you don't like? thats overrated in your opinion
Don't you use rooting hormone for air layering ?
Not on figs but harder to root air layers I use dip and grow.
Spray painting them all at once is also a way to offset the heat.
Did you sterilize the razor blade? It was rather rusty and could transmit disease.
👍
Did you not use routing hormones.
Not on figs but harder to root trees I use dip and grow.
Persimmon cloning.
Maybe?
Oh yeah that would work just as good as figs. They root out real easily.
i miss our chats
Me too! I'm editing a new video right now. Hope to get it posted tomorrow or Monday.
@edibles_and_exotics feel free to join im on
I’m NEW TOO YOUR Channel I am trying to start a variety of trees so I will be looking at quality of the video than you
Great, thanks.
Πολλά λόγια γιά τα απλά.
Make smaller clips & talk less instead of keep going on & on😂nothing rocket science. Thanks Though
Good advice NomadicShanko. He does however have a pleasant voice tho.
For those of us who haven’t done this kind of thing before, I personally appreciate his explanations
Sorry I go into detail for people that want to know the reasons of why it works not just how to do it so they can be more creative.
@@chrisbeckman8181 thanks I was born with. 😁
@xxdonna1959xx thanks, your comment made my day!!!!!