Plant Propagation Cuttings, Divisions & Other Tricks with Pat Battle

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  • Опубліковано 18 кві 2017
  • Multiply the abundance of nature to grow your garden even bigger or just share with others when you utilize these effective plant propagation methods. Pat Battle gives us the best tips for maximizing success with cuttings, how to perform plant divisions with minimal root damage and ways to increase your chances of having cuttings that root and live long healthy lives.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 87

  • @FusionDeveloper
    @FusionDeveloper 6 років тому +25

    I didn't make shortcuts to all, but it would be nice if someone did.
    0:00 ??
    18:30 Grafting Trees
    30:30 Stinging Nettles
    46:50 Rosemary

  • @acts.412
    @acts.412 9 місяців тому +1

    3/4 of the way through this video and I'm really enjoying it. I'm trying to learn a lot about horticulture and propagation is something i'm drawn towards. It's fascinating. Will you come to Australia and teach me everything you know ? 😆
    Thanks for the great video !

  • @trista4congress827
    @trista4congress827 5 років тому

    Thanks, great class! Saved me a trip ha

  • @Celestes_Nest
    @Celestes_Nest 6 років тому +2

    The info is amazing!

  • @cathyanderson8197
    @cathyanderson8197 6 років тому

    I love watching your webinars - they're so good. Thank you. Some of my leggy seedlings get pushed back down into the soil and have to come up again and get stronger. I still need a fan in the basement. We really really need more space here.

  • @misskim2058
    @misskim2058 5 років тому +7

    Thanks so much! Love all the tips!
    I’m just in my first year of propagating, had 100% success with rooting Euonymus Manhattan starting them last late spring/early summer into autumn, though everyone said it was too hot (usually 100° F or so for over a month) and wouldn’t work. All methods made good roots; root hormone, none, organic raw honey, pre-soaking, not pre-soaking, scuffing the stem, not scuffing them, alone and in various combinations, and took notes. I cut away the front top half of milk jugs, poked holes in the bottoms, used just potting soil, put a half dozen cuttings in each, popped the jugs in produce bags to make mini-greenhouses and keep moisture in, nipped the corners for drainage, tied the tops of the bags around the neck of the jugs, left the handles on for ease of carrying them around, labeled and dated everything, and set the grand experiment in a shadier spot of the yard, on the slanted roof of a low animal shelter to make sure they drained easily when I watered. I did not do much more than just check weekly to see if they needed water, but the bags hold moisture in nicely, so they didn’t need much. Had no expectations, but had definite high-hopes. They all made great roots. I planted them in autumn, and they are still looking good. I think they are fairly fail-proof, easy ones for some success. Other than houseplants, I have never propagated anything.
    Now I’m looking at everything around town as a potential “worth a try” future member of my growing plant family. I keep pruners, cleaner and a bucket in the car. Of course, I ask permission, (unless it’s public property, haven’t done cuttings there yet, but my taxes paid for any small quantity of cuttings, I figure).
    So far, business or neighbor, people seem eager to have me shape or trim up their plant. I get a resounding “yes!”. Some businesses are more than happy to wait a bit longer to have to pay a gardener to come do it. I look for people who let theirs get a bit wild, I figured they’d be more open to it, (ultra/over-manicured yards are more likely to have finicky people and that’s fine, they want things how they want them), and I let them tell me how much they do or don’t want removed. Respect goes a long way. I also offer to give them some starts in return, and even plant them for them wherever they want them if they’d like me to, if the cuttings do happen to take root and do well. For evergreen shrubs like Euonymus Manhattan (expensive to buy), and a long fence line that needs some evergreen, uniform privacy covering with the added plus of being variable in height once it grows up, this can be quite the win-win for everyone.
    This video has helped me with the finer points, I appreciate you taking the time to make and upload this for us all. :)

  • @nikkirosa894
    @nikkirosa894 5 років тому +5

    I am in love with all of this living and creating a way for others to live. Thank you.

  • @K1LD3R
    @K1LD3R 5 років тому +13

    “We specialize in weird” - keep it up 👌

  • @chatterbugmm
    @chatterbugmm Місяць тому

    Great information!

  • @virangi25
    @virangi25 5 років тому

    very usfull for bio system technology thank you

  • @thehomeplatespecial597
    @thehomeplatespecial597 5 років тому +2

    amazing. so much information to absorb

  • @danwaltz315
    @danwaltz315 5 років тому +1

    this is a very interesting seminar.

  • @melanin4267
    @melanin4267 11 місяців тому

    Thank you 🤘🏾💜☺️🙏🏾🌻🌻🌻🌻👩🏽‍🌾🌷

  • @orionlottering7349
    @orionlottering7349 5 років тому

    hi. thankyou for your vid. can you pls tell me how thick a branch you can go with the pet bottle technique.

  • @farisfaris2556
    @farisfaris2556 6 років тому +4

    Thank you so much for the video.I like to ask about ALMOND trees how can i air layering Almond trees cause i tried and not succeeds please i wait your reply.

  • @angelanelson88
    @angelanelson88 5 років тому +1

    Can you give me some advice? A neighbor gave me a lot of raspberry clippings, most are about 2 feet long and all are this years growth, at the beginning of September. I put them in water under the porch (2 hours of afternoon sun) but they are not rooting. This is my first time trying to propagate plants.
    Should I get some rooting compound? Should I cut them into smaller plants? Should I bring them into the garage where it stays warmer at night? Should I put them into a perlite/ peat moss mix? Should I make some kind of humidity chamber?

  • @Stacy_Sunshine
    @Stacy_Sunshine 6 років тому +4

    I'm not sure where you are, but here in the Sacramento area if we stick a 6" piece of fig or grape in the ground, it will grow. It's that easy! I'm not sure I've lost ANY of the ones I've tried. And, we have rooted stone fruit scion wood.

  • @trista4congress827
    @trista4congress827 5 років тому +4

    Does desert willow also work for willow tea?

  • @SolaceRadioMeanderRadioNetwork
    @SolaceRadioMeanderRadioNetwork 6 років тому +6

    I use raw honey as a rooting hormone, also.

  • @ncanellos
    @ncanellos Рік тому +1

    Is it possible to take apple 🍎 tree cuttings for rooting ???

  • @allmanslife8482
    @allmanslife8482 5 років тому

    Can you use yacca as a rooting tee

  • @amberemma6136
    @amberemma6136 2 роки тому +1

    Can you make the willow tea from a curly willow? Also known as corkscrew willow?

  • @peterellis4262
    @peterellis4262 Рік тому

    Stooling is the correct term. Reportedly works very well with currants and elderberries

  • @adamb.8854
    @adamb.8854 2 роки тому

    Apricot leaves are very sensitive, after 4 weeks the leaves started to get brown and rotted why? Too much sun or moisture? Thanks
    Apricot is hard to root? Thx

  • @shamanking5195
    @shamanking5195 3 роки тому +1

    great video;
    I have a question
    when traveling abroad what would be the best way to transport cuttings in a luggage ,specially when a trip is couple days long ????

    • @charliemagoo7943
      @charliemagoo7943 2 роки тому +1

      Hydrogel.

    • @shamanking5195
      @shamanking5195 2 роки тому

      Thanks Charlie.

    • @charliemagoo7943
      @charliemagoo7943 2 роки тому +1

      @@shamanking5195 if you take the white powder with you the airport might give trouble but it doesn't take up much space. the powder swells when wet. A lot of sellers dip cuttings in the gel before shipping. At Walmart you can buy a pound of the stuff it's by the basketball goals. It's used to fill the bases.

  • @stealthtrees96
    @stealthtrees96 7 років тому +4

    so if I bought one blueberry bush and propagated several more would they pollinate each other?

    • @africancichlids3011
      @africancichlids3011 6 років тому

      how can it polinate itsself is it he3rmaphadite? can blueberries be both sexes?

    • @cathyanderson8197
      @cathyanderson8197 6 років тому +2

      Yes usually one other blueberry would be all you need. We ended up with a bunch leftover after sales, but from my experience two will do it. You could also wait until they get a little bigger and take some cuttings off each one and create more bushes, but research it out and see. I've always been told 2. 3 is a luxury.

  • @sidneyeaston6927
    @sidneyeaston6927 3 роки тому +1

    Try bush propagation, take any bush type plant and prune it to produce as many stems as possible let new stems grow a few inches remove all lower leaves raise the height of the growing medium so that the new stems can root into it. Never fails and cuttings can be taken from the top of the plant while it is rooting the new stems.

  • @cathyanderson8197
    @cathyanderson8197 6 років тому +4

    Good grief the parsley was 5 ft tall and went to seed and now its all over the place. I don't think you have to worry about parsley - just leave it alone and let it go to seed then you'll have so much you can't believe it. Also you can just take a branch and graft it to another same size branch. Or you can use those clam shell propagators. I watched Paul Gautschi do it with an apple graft onto an existing tree when they budded out, but he removed all the fruit the first year. By the second year it was totally fine, he took the electric tape off and it produced massive amounts of fruit. Beautiful grafting on his trees - he has pruning videos worth watching

  • @gamercat4396
    @gamercat4396 3 роки тому +1

    I swear my willow. I plant a new growth willow cutting next to my other cutting for the growth hormone. After the cuttings catch, I dig the willow out and replant it elsewhere as a living fence.

  • @jurajbucevic1794
    @jurajbucevic1794 7 років тому

    what is the name of company thats sells cover crop mixes in video?

    • @livingwebfarms
      @livingwebfarms  7 років тому +3

      www.walnutcreekseeds.com Walnut Creek Seeds

  • @johnbaxter189
    @johnbaxter189 5 років тому +2

    I used an elderberry stick as a stake and it dint do anything for 2 years then suddenly it sprouted.

  • @RoseLover776
    @RoseLover776 3 роки тому

    What did he say at 32:40 growing from "orchid or ocher" newsletter that he learned from?
    🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹

  • @erikbrink6804
    @erikbrink6804 2 роки тому

    Pat "You Know" Battle

  • @mybuckhead
    @mybuckhead 6 років тому

    How do you root Uncarina Grandidieri?

    • @cathyanderson8197
      @cathyanderson8197 6 років тому

      Is that the black eyed susan vine? I would try layering or serpentine layering. Pull the vine down, scrape some green off the vine with your thumb nail gently, and put it under the dirt, put a rock on it. If its a real long vine, you could probably put it under the dirt 2-3 times. Just go 6 inches, scrape some vine, put under dirt, etc

  • @erikbrink6804
    @erikbrink6804 2 роки тому +1

    Great information, YOU KNOW? Lol

  • @heyphilphil
    @heyphilphil 2 роки тому

    what was missing was useful Perennial vegetables....like purple tree collards...Okinawa spinach....longevity spinach....even peppers.

  • @MrBsmurfy
    @MrBsmurfy 7 років тому +4

    why would a tomato plant growing in a smaller pot be ready sooner for planting?

    • @thehomeplatespecial597
      @thehomeplatespecial597 5 років тому +2

      Brian Murphy i was wondering the same thing

    • @davidgordon5632
      @davidgordon5632 3 роки тому +1

      i would like to know the science behind that as well

    • @cindyabramowicz4346
      @cindyabramowicz4346 2 роки тому +1

      @@thehomeplatespecial597 i believe it's because the smaller space gives more capillary action.

    • @plantsim
      @plantsim 2 роки тому +1

      better roots in an appropriately sized pot

  • @philippwickey9484
    @philippwickey9484 3 роки тому

    Ramps? (~53min)

  • @davidk2603
    @davidk2603 7 років тому +2

    Can you explain why one might get in to trouble selling cuttings of 1 tomatoe over another?

    • @livingwebfarms
      @livingwebfarms  7 років тому +3

      David Basquiat, hybrid breeds are copywritten and owned by the people that created them, that is why.

    • @wendycash54
      @wendycash54 6 років тому

      Which means its against the law to propagate regardless of whether you sell them or keep them. You can't really say its ok, it's not. Just because you bought the plant you are not free to make more.

    • @cathyanderson8197
      @cathyanderson8197 6 років тому +4

      Yes they have so if people haven't bought food seeds by now its pretty much on them. They have been very public about their goals, I don't know how people can not know or understand how serious that is. It's in the world news. Italy and France is suing the corporations for rights to grow their own food, bc both those countries depend totally on tourism for their food. Not to mention the perfume companies. Neither of those countries is going down easily. I read that someone in Italy bombed that particular seed company there. So unlike America who is asleep at the wheel it would seem they are not -- GMO's have been outlawed there for years. They don't want that crap in there food.

    • @cathyanderson8197
      @cathyanderson8197 6 років тому +3

      ridiculous....how can you own the earth? do we own the stars too? how arrogant people are. its embarrassing to me

    • @misskim2058
      @misskim2058 5 років тому +2

      Cathy, it’s way past that now... that’s exactly the intention, and the “population” in their opinion, is simply in their way. Best read up on UN agendas, it’s been hell trying to get people to stop listening to the distractions of mainstream media silly circus act and get serious, and look at what they’re openly publishing. All we ever hear is parroted Tavistock and Cointelpro-created phrases, MSM-distributed and incessantly hammered home into the minds of the TV and movie watchers. Let’s say them all together: “Conspiracy theory”, “tin foil hat”, “Satanic Panic”, “False Memory Syndrome”, “put down the crack pipe“, “don’t breed”, “you must live in your mothers basement“, “they can’t do that”, “everyone would have to be in in it”, etc., etc., etc....ad nauseum.
      People need to read Agendas 21, 2030, 2050, some DEW patents, and maybe look into the Silent War, and that’s just for mini-openers. Then they can stop thinking that the “wildfires“ of California are wildfires, stop thinking ISIS has anything to do with any kind of Muslim-founded troublemakers, or Muslim financing, or that they are some main threat to our way of life, or that the “wall” is being suggested to keep people out (als China and Germany about that). The threat is both from within, and worldwide, and below, not above, and has everyone pretty well surrounded while they watch alllll the ridiculous distractions on their mindless TVs...and once they get some reading done, then they can help others do the same, they can put down the remote for good, they won’t want anything to do with it (especially if they read up on the patents of TV’s-since their inception, then even just jump to the ones-over a dozen from this century alone- by H. Lu), and then help spread the word. It may all be insane, but it is true.
      The enemy always has been and always will be the insane 1% in power. It’s not about race, nationality, etc. It’s about insane people having the power and having lulled the masses into a deep mental sleep, and conned them into thinking they’re wearing the white hats. They aren’t. They play by a different rule book, and it only amuses them and flatters them when anyone expresses shock, disgust, or any of that. And they’re absolutely delighted when people repeat their aforementioned, socially-planted phrases, because such people are violently defending the perps, their own oppressors, and they really are amused by that.

  • @adenclarke9939
    @adenclarke9939 3 місяці тому

    Ya know

  • @nathandeneault5778
    @nathandeneault5778 7 років тому +2

    nodes? where a branch or leaf was.

    • @KCHeirloomsOrganics
      @KCHeirloomsOrganics 7 років тому

      Nathan Deneault you are correct :)

    • @cathyanderson8197
      @cathyanderson8197 6 років тому

      ua-cam.com/video/q6Dc2nADaH4/v-deo.html Here's a guy doing an air propagation with a water bottle. Search around for one doing a large soda bottle. Also check out Clamshell Air Propagation. We got a whole bunch of them. They're already made, come with all the stuff you need including the zip ties. I talked to the guy who invented them on the phone. I think amazon has them

    • @joemercieca4794
      @joemercieca4794 5 років тому +1

      The proper term is lenticel. (pronounced lentisel)
      One of many raised spores on woody plants that allow the interchange of gas between the atmosphere and internal tissue.

  • @specialk22tt
    @specialk22tt 5 років тому +4

    "Ya know?"

    • @misskim2058
      @misskim2058 5 років тому +2

      If that’s all you heard, you don’t know how to listen, and you definitely missed out. Your loss. Not his. Not ours.

    • @thehomeplatespecial597
      @thehomeplatespecial597 5 років тому +1

      Knockout Artist rude

    • @HookedOnTXMusic
      @HookedOnTXMusic 4 роки тому

      @@misskim2058 it isn't all I heard but it is distracting. Listening to someone fill a pause with "uh" "uh" is distracting as well. He has great information and i appreciate the lesson but it is annoying to hear "ya know" every two minutes.

    • @misskim2058
      @misskim2058 4 роки тому

      Perhaps, but it is a lack of ability to filter one’s own hearing. Filtering is a listening skill that one can develop, then one isn’t annoyed or focused whatsoever on commonly-used pausing words and phrases, which will need to be used more in casual presentations where there is a free-flow of information being imparted, and less often in a formal, prepared and practiced speech.
      One often gathers much more useful information from the former, since it it shared in a more tailored manner to the audience, as he does here, so naturallly the speaker will occasionally pause to best choose his or her words, as the course of the presentation shifts to suit the audience. It’s rather silly to be annoyed by it, though, really, in light of the obvious need for its use.

    • @HookedOnTXMusic
      @HookedOnTXMusic 4 роки тому

      @@misskim2058 you've obviously never taken a speech class 🙄
      That's the first lesson of public speaking. Nice try at an insult though

  • @iminasamscar9432
    @iminasamscar9432 5 років тому

    "I have a friend, his name is Will Shmitt"

  • @beeblaak1649
    @beeblaak1649 Рік тому

    😳😞can't hear the conversation, and they speak too fast. How sad. 🥺

  • @FusionDeveloper
    @FusionDeveloper 6 років тому

    It's funny to see them writing things down, instead of focusing on what he is saying and taking notes from the video later. The time to pay attention and ask questions, was during the presentation. Also, everything is easier when you have perfect conditions, like that industrial sized greenhouse. If you improvise by buying a little Jiffy Plastic Greenhouse and put it on a porch and keep it soggy with jiffy peat pods, you will probably end up the same as me, a tray full of wasted time and mold. My advice is, be careful with ANY sort of enclosure! You want humidity, but FRESH AIR is VITAL, unless you like toxic molds instead of healthy plants. But please consider that I have so-so results from so-so effort and not an expert.
    Sulfur powder is organic and prevents mold.

    • @cathyanderson8197
      @cathyanderson8197 6 років тому +1

      Yes it is, and not everybody can afford to bottom heat all the flats, or pay that gigantic electric bill and who wants to? Get a rocket stove for the nursery, I've also heard of people building small compost piles of leaves and sticks and grass cuttings wtih chicken wire in the nursery area bc it will heat up. It may also bring mice with it since its warm. Solar is the only way to go for me, I think it's the future for plants. Its why plants are so ridiculously expensive you're paying for their patents, and their electric bill

    • @thehomeplatespecial597
      @thehomeplatespecial597 5 років тому

      Jay H they wouldnt know for sure if there would be a video posted and where. I thought it was an attentive group and a great teacher.

  • @michaelchaplin866
    @michaelchaplin866 6 років тому +7

    you know? i mean you know right? you know you know you know? do you know? i know, you know? yea you know?

    • @misskim2058
      @misskim2058 5 років тому +2

      You and KA both. Same goes for you. If that’s all you heard, you don’t know how to listen, and you definitely missed out. Your loss. Not his. Not ours.

    • @thehomeplatespecial597
      @thehomeplatespecial597 5 років тому

      mike george your focus is all wrong

    • @orangefool1527
      @orangefool1527 Рік тому

      You know, I never would have noticed if you hadn’t said anything. Now I hear every single one.

  • @ripsteadyyangin9090
    @ripsteadyyangin9090 5 років тому +2

    A site of potentiality? LOL it's a node bruh

    • @joemercieca4794
      @joemercieca4794 5 років тому +1

      Alex Jonestown You are correct it is a node. But LOL the PROPER term is lenticel. (pronounced lentisel)
      One of many raised spores on woody plants that allow the interchange of gas between the atmosphere and internal tissue.