Heloo! I am from România! I recently found your videos and i want to thank you for them. I started a few years ago to multiply plants and i learnd much from your videos. Thank you!
Very interesting! You're the first person (of all the rosarians I follow on SM) to talk about air layering, which is the method I've watched my mother use since the 1960s here in the Caribbean with excellent results.
Once again a great video! Roses always intimidated me buy since finding your channel last year I "rescued" 13 rose plants from various people who were disposing if them and having great success!
Thank you for your videos! I'm looking forward to handling a branch from an old acquaintance's roses and plant it across town in the backyard of my apartment... This is an exciting turn in life, but I will have to wait until the season arrives in March, in Cleveland, OH.
Thank you so much Jason for this very intensive beginners tutorial on propagation! Extremely useful information at a pace which makes it easy to understand :)
I am planning to create a garden rose, and I found your detailed information how to multiply roses most helpful, in order to keep a lavish roses garden, Thank you 😊👍
Really appreciate that chart at 5:57. I'm new to cuttings and having good results with Hardy plants that popped up naturally in my backyard haha, but I messed up roses last year and think this video will help this time around. I didn't know about the different strengths of rooting hormone either good stuff thanks.
We planted six roses this year as a direct result of watching your passion for roses and I have to say we were prepared for the worst but everything has gone excellently! Very little bug damage to the leaves, very few japanese beetles, they weren't even a problem (I flicked them off with my fingers), the roses grew from bareroot plants just fine except for one potted rose which was much further along. Our next big hurdle is making it through the winter!! It gets so cold here. Thanks again for your inspiration and the knowledge you share.
Thanks for letting me know Mic, and happy to hear that things went so smoothly. I'll cross my fingers for you that everything comes through the winter okay.
A Norwegian rose grower told me he found the best protection for roses in winter was branches of conifer thickly placed around the plant, pyramid style. Good luck with yours, roses are such wonderful plants.
Excellent work Jason! I haven't propagated roses before now, but you have inspired me! We're just entering Spring here (Oz) so there's heaps of soft growth bursting our. Many Thanks. 🌹
I've never tried to propagate roses before because it seems intimidating. But your video is very informative and has given me the confidence to give it a try.
Thank you so much. As a novice “rose” grower, I’ve clearly had this and had no idea what it was. Lower Hudson Valley, NY. I have some roses that have no problems and others I’ll be pulling this weekend. My roses did not come with this. It was two to three years after planting that I saw this crazy growth. I’m enjoying your channel, techniques for propagation and excellent information. Thank you!
This has been the absolute MOST helpful piece of information that I have seen on this topic. Very informative and organized into useful information. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge and love of roses with us!
Yo! THANK YOU! I can start a side-hustle with this knowledge now. I've been tending to a finite set of roses we planted a few years back now- most did very well, learned a lot but now I'm ready to tackle propagation. Landscaping is a high demand out here in SoCal, could turn into a lil business - THANK YOU!
I very much appreciate you taking your time to bless me with your proven techniques. I pray that you have continued success from all of your hard work my brother. May you be blessed in you’re craft in the future.
Thank you. Very good info. I live in California, grow roses, but have not tried propagating them. So many new varieties are available every year and there isn't enough place in the garden ! But its a very interesting topic. Thank you very much for sharing. 🙏🏻. Also, I have a lot of rootstocks, but have never seen self propagating roses !! There is so.much to.learn !!
I am so glad you did this video! I have some new plants that I will be trying to propagate next year, either by soft or semi- hardwood methods. I'm looking to see if my own-root sea foam shrub will sucker - that will help! Thanks very much.
Thanks Jason. I have not been successful in the past. But, about a mouth ago I was transplanting Azaleas and Hydrangeas. I accidently broke a few branches, so I cut them and stuck them. Hard, semi, and soft sense it would just go to waste if not planted. Now I checked on them today and the leaves are still green and healthy looking, and I think the Azaleas have small new leaves starting near the dirt. So here's hoping with your help, I might finally be successful at this.
Thank you! I have a rugosa rose that used to have a companion side-by-side with it. The companion died, but meanwhile the one that remains has been "walking" its way out onto the lawn. 😆 I thought I should be able to take advantage of that to replace the now-"missing" plant, and this points me in the right direction.
At the local rose garden, the heirloom roses seem to be pretty strong with self layering, it’s interesting to see how overgrown the heirloom roses are in comparison to the others!
@Fraser Valley Rose Farm I really like that you are using those cuttings in the styrofoam containers and then the bigger plastic container, controlling the moisture and environment. I have been following a couple of horticulturists on U-Tube using the air propagation method of rooting. One is Charles Malki, Biologist, Owner of IV Organics. So I am really interested in seeing your results with that method 🤓
thank you so much you don't know how much I appreciate this I love flowers I'm going to try some of these methods I may try all of them I really appreciate all your input and your professionalism of explaining thank you so much you don't know how much I appreciate this I love flowers I'm going to try some of these methods I may try all of them I really appreciate all your input and your professionalism of explaining so well I live in the Deep South at the time I do not have a greenhouse but I make some smaller greenhouses so anyway I greatly appreciate this and you are so good at what you do I have fully subscribed you fully I greatly appreciate it again thank you now outside to do some work or should I say fun God put so many beautiful plants on this Earth we need to take care of them so well
You just so thorough! I have so much info to work with. I have this old pink fringe rose that I’m going to propagate in a 100 plus year old garden. I’ll let you know what happens
A woman I knew in Denver would cut the last blossom of the year, plant it in dirt, and cover it with a milk carton. In the spring, she had another rose bush growing. She had a row of them.
Great video, i would love for you to do really close up of the semi wood method, and show us where exactly to cut in at and how many nodes we need for each planting to root?❤
Hello! I've recently discovered and have been enjoying your channel. One tip I keep hoping to come across regarding rose propagation is whether you can combine with dead heading or spring pruning. It seems a natural fit to try and propagate when you're already removing plant material, but nobody seems to mention this potentially beneficial double duty. Do you have any thoughts on that? Thanks for sharing your expertise!
Thanks David. It's a matter of timing for me. I prefer semi-hardwood cuttings from fresh new growth - it's just where I've had the most success in cuttings. At the time of early spring pruning, the stems you're taking off are mainly last year's growth (hardwood) or possible extremely fresh shoots (softwood tips). As to the time of deadheading, that's more promising in my opinion, because the firmness of stem just behind the spent flower is pretty close to my perfect stage for propagation. So yes, I'm pretty much going out to the stock field and looking for roses that are just finishing a flush of blooms, and then combine a deadheading with a slightly lower reshaping to give me loads of stems for propagation.
I got An inmense good surprise , I bought a beautiful yellow rose to propagate it. I put it in water in the meantime, and suddenly it begun to sprout !! On the other Hand, I have been trying to propagate lemons , garlic, without success 😀
Thanks a lot for explaining! I was trying to root rose cuttings during late spring and nothing happened, o think I failed for using hard wood. I'll try it again this cold season
Thanks very much Jason. Wish I’d discovered this channel earlier might be too late for this season. Question early September in England. Am I in time to do a semi cutting, looks like the last of the flowers on a blue rose I have wanted to grow for years?
I'd encourage you to give it a try even this late in the season. You have a mild climate and that works in your favor. I'm still taking a few cuttings now - I'll be starting them under lights and on a heat mat to help it along, but even with a simple humidity dome you stand a chance of rooting them before it gets too cold a dreary.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thanks Jason, hope to have tomorrow afternoon off and it could be 30c so I’ll give it a try. Might just make it. Great to get such a quick answer. Best Wishes.🏖🥀
Many thanks for your sage advice! I have a rose cutting that is now a foot and a half long, looks happy, should I cut it back a bit, looks like a climber, thin and whippy, the tag disappeared.
Another great video, not only for roses but propagation in general. One thing I don't understand, is why you remove so much of the leaves and even the growing tips of the cuttings. I know you don't want to put the lower leaves underground (or in water when rooting cuttings in water at home) but don't you need some leaves to gather energy/photosynthesis for the stem and the roots we hope are forming? Also, I would have thought the growing tip was a 'plus', or maybe if it's cut off, it forces the stem to grow in other directions. These might be dumb questions, if so, my apologies!
Thanks Linda. Those are not dumb questions at all, but actually at the heart of refining your cutting technique for your own growing conditions. The leaves still contribute (a little) energy, and send hormones down the stem to encourage rooting. So l keep them on, but here's the balance: there's no longer a source for moisture, so unless you keep fairly high humidity, you'll see rapid wilt, scorch and leaf drop. But then high moisture/humidity increases the risk of rot. I've been more successful trying to keep humidity down a bit lower, but to make that work, I can't have excess leaf surface. I also like to pack my cuttings a bit tight (see 13:11 in this video), and if I'd left all of the leaves intact, they'd be pressed up against their neighbors. I should stress that different approaches can work just fine. I've seen the "pop bottle" method, where more leaves were left in place (on larger cuttings) and it worked well. I've heard from some people who preemptively strip all leaves from semi-hardwood cuttings (because they figure most of them will drop off during propagation anyhow). As for softwood tips, I've played around with it and found that the very tenderest of tips can be the very first tissue to wilt and blacken off, so I usually don't bother leaving it on. YMMV
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you. So in a nutshell, it prevents the most common problems and allows the energy to focus on making new roots. Thanks for helping me understand.
Hello Jason, a very interesting bit of information. I’m a bit tired these days of summer heat. It doesn’t agree with me nor my gardening roses neither. It’s sad to see all the efforts I put into having beautiful delicate roses literally all faint away due to the heat waves we’ve had one after an other. I probably should have been more scrupulously careful when I bought them. Perhaps you can advise names of roses that can tolerate heat waves without dying. Love to watch and learn from you but for now I don’t have the enthusiasm to propagate roses nor seedlings. Thank love.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Indeed autumn is the season I love best although here in Mallorca it’s nothing comparable to northern Spain. Needless to mention USA or Canada. I used to enjoy the crisp early sunsets by the Hudson River and the fallen leaves … of course roses in a healthy garden is almost a favorite dream. Keep well and enjoy your creative work.
Thank you so much for your videos I have propagated 3 successful rose cuttings!! I am so happy!!! Do you have any additional pictures of your super Dorothy?
Your channel is very informative for Rose lover. I am beginner with gardening. I recently bought a Brindanella Ross not in very good shape. Leaves have holes all over the plant and it was last left so I got it. Do you think I can propagate by semi soft cuttings and plz advise what I can do to save this plant. Thank you so much for your videos. Learning a lot❤
I'd give it some time and good conditions to get healthy growth before I'd even attempt propagation - it's a much easier process with healthy stems to work with. There's no secret: a good position (sun, soil), consistent watering, moderate N fertilizer to encourage new growth, and then just time.
I used some of these methods after watching your video to propagate some shrub roses with great results! My roses are now about 9 months old and in 1 gallon pots. The plants have grown alot and are now quite lanky. Should I prune them before winter to encourage them to be more stocky, or just let them do their thing?
Hi Jason, if you strip off all the leaves of a rose plant, will it grow new leaves on the same stem? Or will it grow on new shoots? And also does the size of the bloom get affected by the number of leaves on the plant? More leaves equals bigger blooms? Thank you!
Hi Raymund. Yes, all other things equal, the more healthy leaves you have on the plant, the more energy is available for growth and flowering. New leaves will emerge when buds shoot into new stems. It's a part of the stem growth process, so no, it won't regrow on an old stem until/unless the dormant buds begin to shoot.
Hi Jason--I did semi-hardwood cuttings using your method and had a great deal of success, but am wondering what I do with the cuttings now and over winter. Any information would help, I am located in coastal Nova Scotia zone 6B. Thanks
Thanks Niels, and congratulations on your success! I overwinter in an unheated greenhouse - if you had a patio or garage (even cool) to shelter the rooted cuttings from the worst of the cold, that would work. If it has to be outside, just pick the most sheltered location you can manage and try to protect the young roots from the worst of the cold (with soil or mulch around the pots, or inside a clear storage bin with some ventilation, but to cut down on the wind)
If I take my cuttings in summer, I overwinter the rooted cuttings in a small pot - upgrade the pot 1 time in the early spring and then plant out when they're rooted to the sides and bottom of the pot.
I have tried the “cut off a bit, stick it in a pot, water and feed regularly and allow your dog to knock it out of the pot several times” method. So far 100% success rate. One Kiftsgate (useful if you need to cover an aircraft hanger), one Peace Rose (your thumbnail?) and 2 I don’t know the names of.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I have to admit I gave the Kiftsgate away! Peace flowered in its first year(I cut off the second flower to give it a chance to get its roots down). I’ve been told that Peace is one of the easiest roses to propagate. The history of its creation is also a story that deserves to be shared.
Hi Jason, very interesting, thanks for the video. I was hoping you could help me with a problem I'm having with tropical hibiscus. I'll take cuttings, use rooting hormone and stick them in potting mix and they will sit there for months not dieing and some will have glossy leaves and look healthy, but when I check them for roots they will only have a callus ball. Any thoughts?
Hello, Jason I'm hook on your channel and enjoy your Videos. I'm watching your video on 6 methods for Propagation of Rose's and you show a chart showing different details to check for when you propagate different plants. I would like to see if you would share that chart with me. Regards,Tom
Hi jason. Thanks for the great video. I have a question - you may find stupid- does feeding the plant acouple of weeks before taking Cuttings help increase the amount of energy in the Cuttings? And then help root faster and easier?
Again, love your videos. Have a very mature Sonia Rose and it only has 1 very thick stem...thinking your "Air Layering" method would help me to propagate it....where can I purchase the black clam shell type plastic you used in the video? Thank You! Carole
Hi I am attempting an experiment using a shortcut. I recently got a hold of two 4 foot long hardwood rose stems around 3/4 inch thick. The bark is still green. I have seen some videos on taking similar long straight stems with existing root ball and erecting them perpendicular but such is not my case. I wonder if you think I can still have some success on rooting this thick hardwood to make a rose tree? From your video it appears your hardwood may require to be under half inch thick. Your content is great with lots to learn btw.
Hello Jason! Thank you for the very informative video! I have a question that I can't seem to find the answer for online, and really hope that you'll be able to help. Your video gave me the courage to try and propagate my own Shropshire Lad climber rose. I used the winter/slow method and it seems to be a success as there are buds all over the cutting. I wonder what should I do with the cutting in the spring. It's not planted in its final spot in the garden and I wonder if I should just transplant it in the ground to the new location, or it needs to be kept in a pot for a season or two until it gets bigger. I garden in zone 5b. Any information you can give me will be invaluable. Thank you!
Take it slow. The expression of buds doesn't mean that there are sufficient roots in place, and the hardwood method is notoriously slow for root development. If you can manage it, I'd leave them in the same spot for the majority of the first season until they have beefy roots. After that it's a judgement call based on size, but for me it's usually a full year + before I transplant into the garden
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you so much for your reply! I can leave it in this spot for another season for sure. Again, I can't thank you enough for your help! 🙂
Very interesting. Many thanks. I would like to know if it's possible to take cuttings from a grafted rose. I bought 2 David Austin roses last year and I believe they are grafted. I gather that grafted roses will not live as long as own root, so I really want to replicate these roses. Is it possible? Many thanks in advance.
Last year I pulled out my roses from the ground since we are moving and I hate to leave them, all my plnats grew, a month later we came back to our old place to see some old roots still sticking to the ground developed new shoots, I dug them and now they are blooming. I did’t know roots can develop into a whole new plant
I wonder if those were grafted varieties - if so, the remaining rootstock would produce quite a different plant. Or are the flowers quite similar to the original?
How do you tell the difference between rugosas & gallicas on those that reproduce by underground suckers? I have a specimen from my grandparent's farm & would like to know more about it. Thanks! Great video!
Hi Emily. Rugosas have distinctive ridges on their foliage - and a quick google image search (for "rosa rugosa foliage") will show you what to look for. Rosa gallica foliage is not nearly so "rugged" and also not so glossy - if equating to paint, you'd say the rugosas might be semi-gloss while gallicas are more like matte. Rugosas are repeat bloomers, and have great big hips with a distinctive shape (again, google image search). Best luck IDing your grandparents' roses.
Hi Jason, One of my rose stem broke just at the bottom of the air layering ball and I had to cut the stem off. I checked inside the air layering ball and saw callus and two about one and half inches long roots. I potted it up with moist peat moss in a quart size pot. Should I water once a week with very diluted fish fertilizer or not water at all? I kept it under the grow light with a clear zip lock bag just covering the stem and leaves from top. Please advice.
Watering frequency isn't something that can be decided from afar. You'll want to moisten the soil from time to time, and a dilute liquid feed is appropriate if you've already seen roots.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you so much! I have seen callus around the bottom and only 2 small (about 1 and half inches long) white roots. Should I start diluted liquid feed at this point or wait another 1 or 2 weeks before starting liquid feed?
I hope you can help me. I have a big mother rose with 3-4 large branches that i have to add support or they will fall. May i cut them to try and grow own roots. Im very new to gardening. This is my 1st year. My dream was alway start my own garden. Thanks in advance!!! Also appreciate your info and channel.
I'm not sure those older thicker stems are the best for propagation, but if the shrub is healthy and vigorous a medium low prune will result in more shoots from the nearer to the base.
Hello Jason. I managed to root two roses from cutting but I'm not sure what to do now, I don't have a green house could you please advise me whether I should leave the very young plant outside or should I bring it in during the winter? It gets really cold here in New Jersey. Many thanks.
Hi Gloria. That can be a tough call, and it depends on how well rooted the plants are. If they're well-rooted to the sides and bottom of a 4 or 6" pot, you could consider overwintering them with one or more of the measures I describe in this video: ua-cam.com/video/0nsY9MUmVIo/v-deo.html If they're less well rooted, it might make more sense to keep them growing and active indoor with lights.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you Jason it seems like the indoor option is the best one. I'm so excited to have succeed especially because they are Heirloom roses. I really appreciate your videos and all that good advice.
Hi Jason, where can I purchase some of plastic enclosures that you used for the air layering that went around the tree limb? That look like it'd be handy dandy. Thank you
I have them listed on my propagation shopping list on Amazon: www.amazon.com/shop/fraservalleyrosefarm/list/2YK06EGYXJ0ML?ref=cm_sw_em_r_inf_list_own_fraservalleyrosefarm_dp_5fQdaU4ljZGDo
I had Belle Époque, jack’s wish,twighlight zone & John boy HT’s coming from Cheshire ( without them being recorded delivery).. no signature required i have a feeling Royal Mail delivery person stole them.. so i ordered peace,Belle Époque,polar star, remember me & moody blue from British roses in Kent..& got money back from jones roses.. i just wanted some big blousy blooms this summer
last time you adviced to get more stearile soil and lean towards dryer medium to avoid rot , but now whats happening is they calus quicker , but then they start to dry out. my timer does 2 secs every 20min , there plastic around them and 80%shade
Remarkable amount of relevant info you're able to provide in such a short video, I love your channel! 🌺🌷🌺
Thanks so much!
Heloo! I am from România! I recently found your videos and i want to thank you for them. I started a few years ago to multiply plants and i learnd much from your videos. Thank you!
My pleasure - thanks for the encouragement!
Very interesting! You're the first person (of all the rosarians I follow on SM) to talk about air layering, which is the method I've watched my mother use since the 1960s here in the Caribbean with excellent results.
Thanks - nothing new here! The same tried and tested methods that our parents and grandparents used in their own time.
Once again a great video! Roses always intimidated me buy since finding your channel last year I "rescued" 13 rose plants from various people who were disposing if them and having great success!
Thanks Amanda - that's great to hear. Now I wonder if we can get you to "rescue" some from the local garden center!
Thank you for your videos! I'm looking forward to handling a branch from an old acquaintance's roses and plant it across town in the backyard of my apartment... This is an exciting turn in life, but I will have to wait until the season arrives in March, in Cleveland, OH.
Thank you so much Jason for this very intensive beginners tutorial on propagation! Extremely useful information at a pace which makes it easy to understand :)
I am planning to create a garden rose, and I found your detailed information how to multiply roses most helpful, in order to keep a lavish roses garden, Thank you 😊👍
So helpful to get advice from a true expert in the business. Thank you for sharing with us hobbyists.
Thank you for providing so much knowledge in such a short video. I look forward to taking hardwood cuttings this fall.
Best of luck with your cuttings!
Really appreciate that chart at 5:57. I'm new to cuttings and having good results with Hardy plants that popped up naturally in my backyard haha, but I messed up roses last year and think this video will help this time around. I didn't know about the different strengths of rooting hormone either good stuff thanks.
My pleasure Max
Good job!
One of the best videos about roses!
This is THE VERY BEST all about roses video on UA-cam!!!😁 💥
I am most impressed with your depth of knowledge, professionalisim and clear presentation of whatever the subject is of your several videos. Thanks.
My pleasure. Thanks Bill
We planted six roses this year as a direct result of watching your passion for roses and I have to say we were prepared for the worst but everything has gone excellently! Very little bug damage to the leaves, very few japanese beetles, they weren't even a problem (I flicked them off with my fingers), the roses grew from bareroot plants just fine except for one potted rose which was much further along. Our next big hurdle is making it through the winter!! It gets so cold here. Thanks again for your inspiration and the knowledge you share.
Thanks for letting me know Mic, and happy to hear that things went so smoothly. I'll cross my fingers for you that everything comes through the winter okay.
A Norwegian rose grower told me he found the best protection for roses in winter was branches of conifer thickly placed around the plant, pyramid style. Good luck with yours, roses are such wonderful plants.
Excellent work Jason!
I haven't propagated roses before now, but you have inspired me! We're just entering Spring here (Oz) so there's heaps of soft growth bursting our.
Many Thanks. 🌹
Happy to hear it - and excited for your coming season!
I've never tried to propagate roses before because it seems intimidating. But your video is very informative and has given me the confidence to give it a try.
Best of luck and let me know how it goes for you.
Thank you so much. As a novice “rose” grower, I’ve clearly had this and had no idea what it was. Lower Hudson Valley, NY. I have some roses that have no problems and others I’ll be pulling this weekend. My roses did not come with this. It was two to three years after planting that I saw this crazy growth. I’m enjoying your channel, techniques for propagation and excellent information. Thank you!
This has been the absolute MOST helpful piece of information that I have seen on this topic. Very informative and organized into useful information. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge and love of roses with us!
As always brilliant. Thanks for sharing your experience with us mate
I cannot believe the excitement I feel Whatever your doing! 😂 🤣 I love this channel! Your Awsome.
Yo! THANK YOU! I can start a side-hustle with this knowledge now. I've been tending to a finite set of roses we planted a few years back now- most did very well, learned a lot but now I'm ready to tackle propagation. Landscaping is a high demand out here in SoCal, could turn into a lil business - THANK YOU!
My pleasure - best wishes turning your passion into a side-hustle!
I very much appreciate you taking your time to bless me with your proven techniques. I pray that you have continued success from all of your hard work my brother. May you be blessed in you’re craft in the future.
Very interesting, tried hardwood cuttings last year and delighted with my results. Great video as always, would like to try the pinning under soil 😊
You're teaching me so much. I love your videos Jason, thank you.
Thank you. Very good info. I live in California, grow roses, but have not tried propagating them. So many new varieties are available every year and there isn't enough place in the garden ! But its a very interesting topic. Thank you very much for sharing. 🙏🏻. Also, I have a lot of rootstocks, but have never seen self propagating roses !! There is so.much to.learn !!
I am so glad you did this video! I have some new plants that I will be trying to propagate next year, either by soft or semi- hardwood methods. I'm looking to see if my own-root sea foam shrub will sucker - that will help! Thanks very much.
High quality videos like this encourage my interest
Thanks Jason. I have not been successful in the past. But, about a mouth ago I was transplanting Azaleas and Hydrangeas. I accidently broke a few branches, so I cut them and stuck them. Hard, semi, and soft sense it would just go to waste if not planted. Now I checked on them today and the leaves are still green and healthy looking, and I think the Azaleas have small new leaves starting near the dirt. So here's hoping with your help, I might finally be successful at this.
I'll keep my fingers crossed for you Dennis. I haven't really tried rhodos, but I've has an easy time with hydrangeas.
I really appreciate this video - thank you! What a value to learn techniques straight from a professional! ❤
Thank you! I have a rugosa rose that used to have a companion side-by-side with it. The companion died, but meanwhile the one that remains has been "walking" its way out onto the lawn. 😆 I thought I should be able to take advantage of that to replace the now-"missing" plant, and this points me in the right direction.
Great informative video. Extremely helpful. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks Jason for your very informative video 👍
Thank you, very useful information -- well presented methods, pros & cons, etc. to help others decide what to do and then be able to do it!
Thank you,explained everything simply and was easily understood.
My pleasure
Thank you for making this a very useful overview.
You're very welcome
Thank you! That was super simple to follow along with
Good refresher, Jason.
Always good content.
At the local rose garden, the heirloom roses seem to be pretty strong with self layering, it’s interesting to see how overgrown the heirloom roses are in comparison to the others!
Your information is so well presented. Thank you.
Wowowowow what an amazing video. Thanks for the on screen text too
My pleasure. Thanks for watching
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I could eat contet like that and survive. Que rico
Going to try all of them hopefully I’ll find something that works for me.
@Fraser Valley Rose Farm I really like that you are using those cuttings in the styrofoam containers and then the bigger plastic container, controlling the moisture and environment. I have been following a couple of horticulturists on U-Tube using the air propagation method of rooting. One is Charles Malki, Biologist, Owner of IV Organics. So I am really interested in seeing your results with that method 🤓
thank you so much you don't know how much I appreciate this I love flowers I'm going to try some of these methods I may try all of them I really appreciate all your input and your professionalism of explaining thank you so much you don't know how much I appreciate this I love flowers I'm going to try some of these methods I may try all of them I really appreciate all your input and your professionalism of explaining so well I live in the Deep South at the time I do not have a greenhouse but I make some smaller greenhouses so anyway I greatly appreciate this and you are so good at what you do I have fully subscribed you fully I greatly appreciate it again thank you now outside to do some work or should I say fun God put so many beautiful plants on this Earth we need to take care of them so well
You just so thorough! I have so much info to work with. I have this old pink fringe rose that I’m going to propagate in a 100 plus year old garden. I’ll let you know what happens
Thanks Janet - and best of luck with your propagation!
Always a pleasure
Great video!! I really appreciate your knowledge
Thank you for sharing these methods!
Very much my pleasure. Thanks for watching Ilias
Very helpful. Thanks!
Thanks for sharing
When air layering I usually start to see roots after 2 weeks and by 3 the cutting is ready to be removed and potted up
A woman I knew in Denver would cut the last blossom of the year, plant it in dirt, and cover it with a milk carton. In the spring, she had another rose bush growing. She had a row of them.
You are genius! 🌹🌞
Great video, i would love for you to do really close up of the semi wood method, and show us where exactly to cut in at and how many nodes we need for each planting to root?❤
Here you go: ua-cam.com/video/4FicmVqT_a4/v-deo.html
Hello! I've recently discovered and have been enjoying your channel. One tip I keep hoping to come across regarding rose propagation is whether you can combine with dead heading or spring pruning. It seems a natural fit to try and propagate when you're already removing plant material, but nobody seems to mention this potentially beneficial double duty. Do you have any thoughts on that? Thanks for sharing your expertise!
Thanks David. It's a matter of timing for me. I prefer semi-hardwood cuttings from fresh new growth - it's just where I've had the most success in cuttings. At the time of early spring pruning, the stems you're taking off are mainly last year's growth (hardwood) or possible extremely fresh shoots (softwood tips). As to the time of deadheading, that's more promising in my opinion, because the firmness of stem just behind the spent flower is pretty close to my perfect stage for propagation. So yes, I'm pretty much going out to the stock field and looking for roses that are just finishing a flush of blooms, and then combine a deadheading with a slightly lower reshaping to give me loads of stems for propagation.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm l
I got An inmense good surprise , I bought a beautiful yellow rose to propagate it. I put it in water in the meantime, and suddenly it begun to sprout !! On the other Hand, I have been trying to propagate lemons , garlic, without success 😀
very informative, thank you!
Thanks for the real videos!!! Pushing your algo, lol!
Amazing 🌷🌷👌👌
In my central Texas area, in late September, the temperature still hits 90’s. This is our fall.
Thanks a lot for explaining! I was trying to root rose cuttings during late spring and nothing happened, o think I failed for using hard wood. I'll try it again this cold season
Superb video
Great Video!!!
Thanks very much Jason. Wish I’d discovered this channel earlier might be too late for this season. Question early September in England. Am I in time to do a semi cutting, looks like the last of the flowers on a blue rose I have wanted to grow for years?
I'd encourage you to give it a try even this late in the season. You have a mild climate and that works in your favor. I'm still taking a few cuttings now - I'll be starting them under lights and on a heat mat to help it along, but even with a simple humidity dome you stand a chance of rooting them before it gets too cold a dreary.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thanks Jason, hope to have tomorrow afternoon off and it could be 30c so I’ll give it a try. Might just make it. Great to get such a quick answer. Best Wishes.🏖🥀
Many thanks for your sage advice! I have a rose cutting that is now a foot and a half long, looks happy, should I cut it back a bit, looks like a climber, thin and whippy, the tag disappeared.
Way to go! Yes, if I'm managing my newly rooted roses in containers, I usually take off any unruly growth before winter.
Another great video, not only for roses but propagation in general. One thing I don't understand, is why you remove so much of the leaves and even the growing tips of the cuttings. I know you don't want to put the lower leaves underground (or in water when rooting cuttings in water at home) but don't you need some leaves to gather energy/photosynthesis for the stem and the roots we hope are forming? Also, I would have thought the growing tip was a 'plus', or maybe if it's cut off, it forces the stem to grow in other directions. These might be dumb questions, if so, my apologies!
Thanks Linda. Those are not dumb questions at all, but actually at the heart of refining your cutting technique for your own growing conditions. The leaves still contribute (a little) energy, and send hormones down the stem to encourage rooting. So l keep them on, but here's the balance: there's no longer a source for moisture, so unless you keep fairly high humidity, you'll see rapid wilt, scorch and leaf drop. But then high moisture/humidity increases the risk of rot. I've been more successful trying to keep humidity down a bit lower, but to make that work, I can't have excess leaf surface. I also like to pack my cuttings a bit tight (see 13:11 in this video), and if I'd left all of the leaves intact, they'd be pressed up against their neighbors. I should stress that different approaches can work just fine. I've seen the "pop bottle" method, where more leaves were left in place (on larger cuttings) and it worked well. I've heard from some people who preemptively strip all leaves from semi-hardwood cuttings (because they figure most of them will drop off during propagation anyhow). As for softwood tips, I've played around with it and found that the very tenderest of tips can be the very first tissue to wilt and blacken off, so I usually don't bother leaving it on. YMMV
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you. So in a nutshell, it prevents the most common problems and allows the energy to focus on making new roots. Thanks for helping me understand.
Hello Jason, a very interesting bit of information. I’m a bit tired these days of summer heat. It doesn’t agree with me nor my gardening roses neither.
It’s sad to see all the efforts I put into having beautiful delicate roses literally all faint away due to the heat waves we’ve had one after an other.
I probably should have been more scrupulously careful when I bought them. Perhaps you can advise names of roses that can tolerate heat waves without dying.
Love to watch and learn from you but for now I don’t have the enthusiasm to propagate roses nor seedlings.
Thank love.
I hope it cools off for you soon Ignacia - time to enjoy the autumn!
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Indeed autumn is the season I love best although here in Mallorca it’s nothing comparable to northern Spain. Needless to mention USA or Canada. I used to enjoy the crisp early sunsets by the Hudson River and the fallen leaves … of course roses in a healthy garden is almost a favorite dream. Keep well and enjoy your creative work.
Thank you so much for your videos I have propagated 3 successful rose cuttings!! I am so happy!!! Do you have any additional pictures of your super Dorothy?
Your channel is very informative for Rose lover. I am beginner with gardening. I recently bought a Brindanella Ross not in very good shape. Leaves have holes all over the plant and it was last left so I got it. Do you think I can propagate by semi soft cuttings and plz advise what I can do to save this plant. Thank you so much for your videos. Learning a lot❤
I'd give it some time and good conditions to get healthy growth before I'd even attempt propagation - it's a much easier process with healthy stems to work with. There's no secret: a good position (sun, soil), consistent watering, moderate N fertilizer to encourage new growth, and then just time.
I used some of these methods after watching your video to propagate some shrub roses with great results! My roses are now about 9 months old and in 1 gallon pots. The plants have grown alot and are now quite lanky. Should I prune them before winter to encourage them to be more stocky, or just let them do their thing?
Nicely done. I usually prune and strip leaves after they're dormant to clean them up for winter
Hi Jason, if you strip off all the leaves of a rose plant, will it grow new leaves on the same stem? Or will it grow on new shoots? And also does the size of the bloom get affected by the number of leaves on the plant? More leaves equals bigger blooms? Thank you!
Hi Raymund. Yes, all other things equal, the more healthy leaves you have on the plant, the more energy is available for growth and flowering. New leaves will emerge when buds shoot into new stems. It's a part of the stem growth process, so no, it won't regrow on an old stem until/unless the dormant buds begin to shoot.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm thank you Jason! I'm still awake it's 11:49 pm here in Manila. Thank you for your comment. Have a nice day!
Hi Jason--I did semi-hardwood cuttings using your method and had a great deal of success, but am wondering what I do with the cuttings now and over winter. Any information would help, I am located in coastal Nova Scotia zone 6B.
Thanks
Thanks Niels, and congratulations on your success! I overwinter in an unheated greenhouse - if you had a patio or garage (even cool) to shelter the rooted cuttings from the worst of the cold, that would work. If it has to be outside, just pick the most sheltered location you can manage and try to protect the young roots from the worst of the cold (with soil or mulch around the pots, or inside a clear storage bin with some ventilation, but to cut down on the wind)
Thank you!
Love this thank you! When do you plant your semi hardwood cutting outside to come back in the spring?
If I take my cuttings in summer, I overwinter the rooted cuttings in a small pot - upgrade the pot 1 time in the early spring and then plant out when they're rooted to the sides and bottom of the pot.
I have tried the “cut off a bit, stick it in a pot, water and feed regularly and allow your dog to knock it out of the pot several times” method. So far 100% success rate. One Kiftsgate (useful if you need to cover an aircraft hanger), one Peace Rose (your thumbnail?) and 2 I don’t know the names of.
Nicely done! Yes, Peace on the thumbnail. I haven't been brave enough to accept cuttings of Kiftsgate
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I have to admit I gave the Kiftsgate away! Peace flowered in its first year(I cut off the second flower to give it a chance to get its roots down). I’ve been told that Peace is one of the easiest roses to propagate. The history of its creation is also a story that deserves to be shared.
Yiulia from Y-garden did an interesting video some time ago on this topic... good luck! I love moss
Hi Jason, very interesting, thanks for the video.
I was hoping you could help me with a problem I'm having with tropical hibiscus. I'll take cuttings, use rooting hormone and stick them in potting mix and they will sit there for months not dieing and some will have glossy leaves and look healthy, but when I check them for roots they will only have a callus ball. Any thoughts?
Maybe try some with a lower concentration of rooting hormone (or none at all). Sometimes a higher rate will stall cuttings on the callus step.
Hello, Jason
I'm hook on your channel and enjoy your Videos. I'm watching your video on 6 methods for Propagation of Rose's and you show a chart showing different details to check for when you propagate different plants. I would like to see if you would share that chart with me.
Regards,Tom
Thanks. I share a link to the chart itself in the description of the video
Hi jason. Thanks for the great video.
I have a question - you may find stupid- does feeding the plant acouple of weeks before taking Cuttings help increase the amount of energy in the Cuttings? And then help root faster and easier?
The timing may be tricky, but yes, a healthy vigorously growing mother plant will yield better cuttings and a higher success rate.
Some clips for growing and cares the roots stocks pls
Again, love your videos. Have a very mature Sonia Rose and it only has 1 very thick stem...thinking your "Air Layering" method would help me to propagate it....where can I purchase the black clam shell type plastic you used in the video? Thank You! Carole
Amazon is as good as anywhere.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank You!
Hi
I am attempting an experiment using a shortcut. I recently got a hold of two 4 foot long hardwood rose stems around 3/4 inch thick. The bark is still green. I have seen some videos on taking similar long straight stems with existing root ball and erecting them perpendicular but such is not my case. I wonder if you think I can still have some success on rooting this thick hardwood to make a rose tree? From your video it appears your hardwood may require to be under half inch thick.
Your content is great with lots to learn btw.
Hi Gilberto. I've tried something similar, and on an easy-to-root variety (R. multiflora f. inermis) I had some success.
Hello Jason! Thank you for the very informative video! I have a question that I can't seem to find the answer for online, and really hope that you'll be able to help. Your video gave me the courage to try and propagate my own Shropshire Lad climber rose. I used the winter/slow method and it seems to be a success as there are buds all over the cutting. I wonder what should I do with the cutting in the spring. It's not planted in its final spot in the garden and I wonder if I should just transplant it in the ground to the new location, or it needs to be kept in a pot for a season or two until it gets bigger. I garden in zone 5b. Any information you can give me will be invaluable. Thank you!
Take it slow. The expression of buds doesn't mean that there are sufficient roots in place, and the hardwood method is notoriously slow for root development. If you can manage it, I'd leave them in the same spot for the majority of the first season until they have beefy roots. After that it's a judgement call based on size, but for me it's usually a full year + before I transplant into the garden
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you so much for your reply! I can leave it in this spot for another season for sure. Again, I can't thank you enough for your help! 🙂
Very interesting. Many thanks. I would like to know if it's possible to take cuttings from a grafted rose. I bought 2 David Austin roses last year and I believe they are grafted. I gather that grafted roses will not live as long as own root, so I really want to replicate these roses. Is it possible? Many thanks in advance.
It's definitely possible, and of course they have just he qualities of the topstock (scion) variety.
Last year I pulled out my roses from the ground since we are moving and I hate to leave them, all my plnats grew, a month later we came back to our old place to see some old roots still sticking to the ground developed new shoots, I dug them and now they are blooming. I did’t know roots can develop into a whole new plant
This happened to me a number of times already cause I have been transplanting rose plants from one location to another
I wonder if those were grafted varieties - if so, the remaining rootstock would produce quite a different plant. Or are the flowers quite similar to the original?
Thank you! 🙏 When is the best time to air layering?
During the active growing season
Thanks
I really appreciate it Šárka
Ok, now i will try in soft woods. For me i usually go semi
How do you tell the difference between rugosas & gallicas on those that reproduce by underground suckers? I have a specimen from my grandparent's farm & would like to know more about it. Thanks! Great video!
Hi Emily. Rugosas have distinctive ridges on their foliage - and a quick google image search (for "rosa rugosa foliage") will show you what to look for. Rosa gallica foliage is not nearly so "rugged" and also not so glossy - if equating to paint, you'd say the rugosas might be semi-gloss while gallicas are more like matte. Rugosas are repeat bloomers, and have great big hips with a distinctive shape (again, google image search). Best luck IDing your grandparents' roses.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you! I'll do some comparing once spring gets here & my Frazier Rose (my Grandpa's surname 😉) leafs out again. 🌿👍
Hi Jason, One of my rose stem broke just at the bottom of the air layering ball and I had to cut the stem off. I checked inside the air layering ball and saw callus and two about one and half inches long roots. I potted it up with moist peat moss in a quart size pot. Should I water once a week with very diluted fish fertilizer or not water at all? I kept it under the grow light with a clear zip lock bag just covering the stem and leaves from top. Please advice.
Watering frequency isn't something that can be decided from afar. You'll want to moisten the soil from time to time, and a dilute liquid feed is appropriate if you've already seen roots.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you so much! I have seen callus around the bottom and only 2 small (about 1 and half inches long) white roots. Should I start diluted liquid feed at this point or wait another 1 or 2 weeks before starting liquid feed?
I hope you can help me. I have a big mother rose with 3-4 large branches that i have to add support or they will fall. May i cut them to try and grow own roots. Im very new to gardening. This is my 1st year. My dream was alway start my own garden. Thanks in advance!!! Also appreciate your info and channel.
I'm not sure those older thicker stems are the best for propagation, but if the shrub is healthy and vigorous a medium low prune will result in more shoots from the nearer to the base.
Can you make a video of propagating the rose, Peace. It's very challenging to propagate in my eyes
I haven't had any problems with Peace, and I'll see if I can fit in a video featuring the variety.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm thank you so much,
Hello Jason.
I managed to root two roses from cutting but I'm not sure what to do now, I don't have a green house could you please advise me whether I should leave the very young plant outside or should I bring it in during the winter? It gets really cold here in New Jersey.
Many thanks.
Hi Gloria. That can be a tough call, and it depends on how well rooted the plants are. If they're well-rooted to the sides and bottom of a 4 or 6" pot, you could consider overwintering them with one or more of the measures I describe in this video: ua-cam.com/video/0nsY9MUmVIo/v-deo.html If they're less well rooted, it might make more sense to keep them growing and active indoor with lights.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Thank you Jason it seems like the indoor option is the best one. I'm so excited to have succeed especially because they are Heirloom roses.
I really appreciate your videos and all that good advice.
If I'm able to get some to root, what do I do with them over the winter? I live in zone 5a. Could I overwinter in my unheated garage?
That's a fairly good spot. I'd move them in after a bit of cold, so they're a little more on the dormant side
Hi Jason, where can I purchase some of plastic enclosures that you used for the air layering that went around the tree limb? That look like it'd be handy dandy. Thank you
I have them listed on my propagation shopping list on Amazon: www.amazon.com/shop/fraservalleyrosefarm/list/2YK06EGYXJ0ML?ref=cm_sw_em_r_inf_list_own_fraservalleyrosefarm_dp_5fQdaU4ljZGDo
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you :)
My mother used to always root house plants in water. Is that something that woule work for roses?
What is the best way to get started Propagating Roses? I have seen so many ways I don't know how to start! What to use , powder or liquid? Thank you
This is probably how I would start: ua-cam.com/video/4FicmVqT_a4/v-deo.html
When you layer under soil do you scrape any of the outer green layer of the branch first?
You can - and rooting hormone is another option.
I had Belle Époque, jack’s wish,twighlight zone & John boy HT’s coming from Cheshire ( without them being recorded delivery).. no signature required i have a feeling Royal Mail delivery person stole them.. so i ordered peace,Belle Époque,polar star, remember me & moody blue from British roses in Kent..& got money back from jones roses.. i just wanted some big blousy blooms this summer
last time you adviced to get more stearile soil and lean towards dryer medium to avoid rot , but now whats happening is they calus quicker , but then they start to dry out. my timer does 2 secs every 20min , there plastic around them and 80%shade
It's a balancing act! Now that you've solved the rotting problem, I'd nudge towards a little higher light and humidity to encourage fresh top growth.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm LOL This game is not easy but im not giving up Thamx again really appreciate your replies.Thank you for your time