@@JammyGitabsolutely agree!! I hate when I’m looking for actual ‘how to’ information and come across a newbie who’s never done it before. They should put a disclaimer on their thumbnail or in the title so I know not to waste my time.
This guy is brilliant! I'm a school teacher and he nails it with visual examples and clear explanations. So easy to follow. Thank you very much. Regards from Mary I live in the South Island of New Zealand.
This is brilliant. I had no idea. While I only need so many blueberry bushes, I have four acres that I hope to plant with assorted surplus berries for the various birds. I call it my wildlife refuge.
I stopped putting netting over my row of blueberry bushes so the nesting cardinals and other birds are enjoying them. There will still be enough to can or freeze.
Might not be saying that much longer with the price of food today and how many people need nutritious hand outs. My local church food pantry has started carrying fresh (known) local surplus produce and I'm sure that soon enough people will be willing to pick their own since lord knows we can't pick it all for them! The birds will always have plenty of leftovers:)
Our church has a lot of property. We had a large garden to produce fresh produce for those in need. I am considering putting blueberry bushes in down there for the community
I cut the tops flat and the bottoms at and angle. Easily can distinguish how to stick. Planning on trying blueberries. I do elderberries cutting. Luck with and without cloning hormones. Thanks for quick easy instructions without crazy loud music. LOL
After realizing just how close you are, I think you would do an excellent job teaching a class at the Clackamas Community College/OSU annual tree school. Even without years of experience, its clear enough you know what you're doing, and you know how to pass that knowledge on effectively. Thank you, awesome video!
Being a UA-cam channel producer myself I get your point of to many people acting like they are experts just to get views. However what many people don’t understand is many of us are simply documenting our experiences and sharing with those who care to follow. I have been given down the road by people several times. These people did not know who we were and what we were about. They just jumped to conclusions and most times its clear they didn’t watch the video. We never claim to be experts. People who follow us just enjoy watching/following the journey. By the way thanks for your video. Excellent job and I subscribed!! Terry
Thanks for watching, kind words and perspective. I too post some videos that I don’t have a ton of experience on. I usually try to make it clear that. “ I am just trying this “ or something along those lines.
8:23 good strategy, I do almost the exact same thing when propagating everything from peaches to bougainvillea to dragon fruit in Southern California; very different plants but quite similar in concept and execution. My only suggestion would be to thoroughly soak the medium and to *not* water as soon as you put the cuttings in. It's likely that you'll wash much of the rooting hormone off; I let the moisture from the medium do the work. You can also cut a 2-liter bottle or similar and create a humidity dome, that seems to help as well. I typically don't water again until there's some signs of rooting and growth. There's no sense in watering much or at all until roots form because the cuttings have little to no way of taking up water without roots
Just found your channel. I was planning on propagating my blueberries this year but was planning on after harvest this year (now March in zone 8b). I can’t wait to try.
Thank you so much for this video!! Im helping my MIL prune her bushes today and I’ll be propagating from them! My hope is to be able to sell from my plants every spring at the farmers market!
I was doing grape vines like that, sized and cut the same. I found the most success with starting grape vines was in dirt where I composted oak leaves every year. Started with a two foot high pile of leaves then in the spring incorporated the leaves in the soil and planted a hedgerow of vine cuttings -- close enough in a row like a colonial fort wall.
It's fifty degrees and rainy... I chucked all my veg and thirty/dusty houseplants outside and let them get a good drink and shower... And I took cuttings of my blueberry bush! 🥂
Thank you!!!! So glad I saved your video a couple weeks ago. I pruned my blueberries today and saved trimmings to propagate. (Texada Island, Sunshine Coast, BC Canada). Your video explained the steps in an easy to follow order and very detailed manner. New subscriber because of this video. I've never pruned or propagated anything before as this is my first acreage and I can grow trees and bushes. :-) I'm feeling confident because of you.
Thanks for the blueberry trimming and rooting cuttings info. I found it very helpful. I used concrete sand and just water it daily. I have the cuttings in my bedroom at this time because it's March in zone 4 WI. But in May I will put them outside, probably under a mist and possibly under shade cloth until July/Aug. Thank you so much! I bought 3yr plants online from a farm in NJ and they have done great. I planted mine in half concrete sand and half peat moss in grow bags and drag them to a covered porch every winter. I also fertilize with slow release pelletized fertilizer similar to what you used, only 2 Tbsp/plant and around not on the roots. We also put a drip line on the blueberries and they did great.
You remind me so much of a young Lemmy Kilmister , of Motor Head the band {but without the moles}. 100% it's a compliment. Now back to watching the video 😁.
thanks for helping me out. I have been trying this out and didn't know everything you are talking about. I will update my process and hopefully have greater success
This is the exact information I've been looking for! Specifically about when to repot. So glad I found your video! I rooted cuttings a couple years ago from pruned branches, and most of them took. My biggest mistake was having them in the sun, and the soil dried out. This year, I did some in 2 pots of sand. They are sitting on the north side of my greenhouse where they get mostly shade.
@FlanaganHomestead greetings from Sweden! Thank you for sharing your advice! Hope you are enjoying your delicious precious little friends here about now. I will write this cutting taking date of late Feb due to our difference in zones.., I think I have to start an actual calendar for all the different events , it is just tooooo much to bother with, soooooo much easier to just have a list of directions. We spend our lives following other peoples lists, might as well make our own for the most important place in our entire home.
thank you, lots of important fine details that many have left out, as some species are very easy to propagate, many others like fruits are more difficult. I will make a special spot just for the cuttings when I am back in Ecuador, all I do remember as a child was a deep trench with sand in it.
I recently moved to a house with blueberries and have no experience whatsoever with plants, trees, or anything green. This video says everything I needed to know about my blueberries. I was picking some and by accident I cut a branch 😢 Thank you, Flanagan for an amazing explanation. I'm going to try and see if I can make more out of it.
You can use strait peat moss as the medium, I’m lazy just used an old plastic wheelbarrow that had a cracked bottom filled it with peat moss and put in green cuttings when they about 18 months I planted them out.
@@Acts-1322 I’ve been told potatoes 🥔 are better for rose clippings, are the coco cores acidic enough for the blueberries? 🫐 that’s the question you need to answer?
PS. A Stem of Willow (Tree) in warm Water : makes a Willow Bark Tea or Homemade Rooting Medium. 👍 I also leave Willow Whips in a Bucket of Water, for the Catkins to Grow and provide some real early Pollen for my Bees. Nice. 😎 I don't grow those baby Willow (Rooted Stem) Whips on as Trees. But you could. . . Willow Trees can get really BIG ! . . . I let them polllen flower and Leaf up, right in that "Rooting" Cuttings Bucket. Here in Scotland. 🏴 (Rooted all Sorts of things in that thing.) That Bucket stays the same way for Years !Season in, Seasons out. . . 🙃
true story>>>willow lives even when it dies....I love it to use as a rooting hormone>>>one year one fell and I used the broken pieces in a bucket and let the water turn to muck>>>best rooting hormone one could use
Just before your video I watched a video about blueberry propagation it was very vague as far as information watering etc thanks for this very clear information truly appreciated… stay blessed
Great video! Thank you. My daughter's returning from Florida and wants me start her some plants for her new house. I think ill definitely do blueberries for her.
Everybody says you need to use rooting hormone but I took trimmings from my uncles house and stuck them on the ground cut at an angle four of them took now they are big enough I can cut root pieces. They fruited the same season. I planted them even know they were still very small.
Excellent video with good details. The amount of time is what most don’t realize. We prefer suckers for propagating, but cuttings might be the only option in some situations or for larger numbers.
Really enjoyed this. I do make videos too but like you, I will say if I'm just trying it for the first time etc. Can't stand it when someone pretends to be an expert when they're clearly not!
Nice video. I'll give blueberries another shot when I do my pruning. I think blueberry cuttings are a bit more temperamental than some others (figs, currants, elderberry), but I'm inspired to try again.
I learned by propegating elderberries. Eventually the experience helped: finding the right time for me to take the cuttings and experimenting with ways to root them. Had almost no success with cuttings ordered through the mail. I purchased two fine young elders from a nursery so now the cuttings are put to root right away. Looking forward to blueberries.
Often blueberry bushes don’t do well in pots if the soil doesn’t drain well. Could that be the case in your scenarios. I had one in a pot a few year ago that was struggling. I thought it had good soil. When I moved the bush out of the pot the soil on the bottom was so compacted nothing could get through.
@@FlanaganHomestead They’re draining well, I watch them after I water them to make sure they have good drainage . I made sure the soil mixture was as per instructions for bushes in pots. Peat, compost, and coarse sand. And a couple of times in the summer I added an acidifier.
@@samueljaramillo4221 do you have a way to test soil ph. Most soil that has compost and watered a lot tend to be somewhat acidic. You may have pushed it a hair too far
@@FlanaganHomestead yes I do have a ph test kit. I will test it and see what’s going on. I don’t like to over water. I water once a week here in the hot, dry southwest. Water is too expensive here.
@@samueljaramillo4221 if you are in a hot climate and they are in pots you might likely be under watering. Potted plants can’t draw up water from surrounding soil. Here in the Pacific Northwest, which is much cooler, during the summer they water potted blueberries at least once a day. I believe more than once if it is a hot day. Like 90 degrees and above.
Very nice and informative video. One suggestion: Can you include in each gardening video the Hardiness Zone you are operating in? Otherwise excellent video. Thanks
I agree that many people are just making UA-cam . But after many tries and only a few successes I am still trying. . My only success was using just plain old sand and I place them in a shade under a leaky fawset. My patience came from forgetting that I put them there.
Hi, Great video. Some people doing this cover there propagation buckets. I see that you do not. I believe that they water it once, cover it and leave it on the north side. Do you have a comment?
@@joealati many of the people that water once cover and wait are doing softwood cuttings, which is another good technique. It is important to keep moisture on both roots and leaves in that scenario. I do hardwood cuttings in the winter to take advantage of branches cut off during pruning. No leaves at this time to evaporate moisture. So the cover is not as vital. I keep the medium moist and yes still keep on the north side of a structure.
Excellent video with exact information.I have a question->My place is pretty close to the sea, about 2.600 feet above the sea level,on the north/northeast facing slope of a mountain.We have (in general) wet climate,with long hot summers and short-ish/windy/wet harsh winters with lots of snow.Not good for leaving cuttings outside. Ice and wind don't help. So, I take rose tree/pomegranate tree/olive tree cuttings in the winter, late November,after prunning and keep the cuttings in a plastic bag in the fridge.Our freezing/windy months are mostly February and March with night time temperatures dropping under 25F very frequently.Towards the end of March/beginning April, I take the cuttings off the fridge and put them in a bucket of water for about 2-3 weeks.Than I plant them in individual pots in loose soil/bark with a clear plastic bottle on top of them and keep them in a place with lots of light,but not much straight sun on them.Soil always moist,of course.I had pretty good success. You think that I should apply the same strategy with blueberry cuttings?Can I keep them in the fridge for months??Should I first clean the cuttings from their fruit buds?
Have you ever tried adding bottom heat to blueberry cuttings, and leaving them outside in the shade and cool late winter/spring weather? The thing I’ve heard is the warmth on the root system promotes callusing and getting a start on root development while the leaf buds above ground, in cooler air, stay dormant. The reasoning is that there could be better success because the leaves and their moisture requirement needs will be more easily satisfied by a better established root system. That said, I have only one year of trying blueberry cuttings in an inert material like you show here, but without any bottom heat or greenhouse warmth. So I have little experience and results. I’m just searching for what works and maybe you’ll have feedback or try something new and be able to report more useful results than I can now. Thanks! It was encouraging to see your successes.
Thanks for sharing this technique. I had not heard of it or tried it. The logic behind it is sound. I wish I could give you more info on this but I have not done it. I do currently have a free heat mat. I may take some of this years cuttings and put it on them outdoors to see what happens.
I've done it with a sand/peat mix and had success. My two tips are many cuttings for a better chance of a win and for me in zone 4, don't leave them outside for the first winter. I have an unheated walkout basement that is still cold but not freezing it catches daylight and acts like a greenhouse in the spring. My cuttings get a mild winter so they can go doormat but not like outside where they freeze so hard and die.
The humidity dome is required when doing softwood cuttings in early summer when there is already leaves on the branches. Hardwood cutting don't require this. I have never used them.
Can you do it in autumn too? Like as soon as the leaves have fallen of? Or is there a benefit to be doing it in winter rather than autumn? I’m new to this but I was thinking if it could give the cutting a head start with rooting if they are taken in autumn- a little bit like it works with autumn sowing perennials or cold hardy annual flowers. Thanks for a great video! 😊🌸
@@hannablom5803 that is a very good question. I honestly have never tried it in autumn. Not sure the roots would start during the dormant time of year. Mine start in January because I place them in a warmer space. This is after they have had a few months of the natural dormant season. I don’t know if you can completely skip the dormancy and have success.
After the cuttings develop a small root system, where should they be placed over winter? Can they be planted outside in the garden or should they be placed in a cool location inside like a basement to overwinter?
Did you ever get a reply? I am wondering the same thing. I live in Kansas and it gets cold here and wonder if I should move them into the barn or leave outside orbring int he house.
@@johntytla2968 No reply. Some of my cuttings have new leaves and others are still just green stems. I put mine in my garage next to a east facing window and the temperature stays above freezing. I'll know next spring what happens. I don't let them dry out and check a few times a week. So far so good. Good Luck.
I leave mine in the pots outside. Layers of mulch help from getting too cold. The winters here are not too severe so leaving outside and getting the natural dormant period is good. Is you get down to single digits often, I would find a place that is still cold but not frigid. Pump house, garage, insulated shop.
@@FlanaganHomestead I was considering putting my cuttings and plants outside, but I have trouble with squirrels and deer that eat just about everything. If I put a pot outside the squirrel's will dig in the pot and knock it over. the only garden I can have is one with a high wire fence around it or I won't have anything left. I like experimenting with everything and anything, that's why I'm playing around with propagating Blue Berries. If I have success with the Blue Berries, I'm not sure what I'll do with them. To many interests, to little time, and jack of all trades, master of none. Just plain crazy LOL
I suppose you could. Pest moss is fairly inert. It is acidic so it would be harmful for many plants. However blueberries like acidic soil so you might be able to pull it off.
I bought a plant from WM and took ot apart to plant and got the full root, plus a small cutting that i guess the just threw in like wgaf amd i have had that small piece in a plastic cup with a clear plastic cup on top as a small green house and it to my surprise began to root and grow, so i technically got 2 BB plants out of the one i bought at wally world
Question: I have a very old blueberry patch (30+ years) that produces tons of giant blueberries every year. There is a complete carpet of new growth underneath the large bushes sprouting from the mature root system . Can I cut these new stem sprouts to propagate and does it have to be in January? Thank you for the great video.
You can cut those, they will work. You do not have to do it in January. I do it in the winter because I use a hardwood cutting technique. Many people prefer propagating from a softwood cutting done late spring with new growth. I have not posted a video of this technique but many people have.
I have done some softwood cuttings but I prefer to do hardwood because I am using the waste material and I have more time to dedicate to getting them started.
I have never used it before but it has the two main characteristics we are looking for. It is an inert medium and it holds moisture. I am guessing you can have success with it.
@@FlanaganHomesteadThank you so much for responding! My blueberries are already setting flowers but I will definitely give it a try this coming winter.
Far too many "content" videos out there.. thank you for actual experience being shared. Your wisdom is most appreciated.
Absolutely!!!
True mate, the 'all the gear and no idea' UA-cam channels are some of the worst on here 👍
@@JammyGitabsolutely agree!! I hate when I’m looking for actual ‘how to’ information and come across a newbie who’s never done it before. They should put a disclaimer on their thumbnail or in the title so I know not to waste my time.
Thank you for this education 👊🏻🫐👊🏻
This guy is brilliant! I'm a school teacher and he nails it with visual examples and clear explanations. So easy to follow. Thank you very much. Regards from Mary I live in the South Island of New Zealand.
Thanks for the kind words.
School teachers are definitely over rated.
Hi Mary I’m going to try this as well . Phil from NZ 🇳🇿
I pruned a currant this winter and stuck it's branches in the ground and now have nine currant plants!
Nice! Congratulations! Are they just ornamental, or are they edible for humans too? (I am new)
This is brilliant. I had no idea. While I only need so many blueberry bushes, I have four acres that I hope to plant with assorted surplus berries for the various birds. I call it my wildlife refuge.
I stopped putting netting over my row of blueberry bushes so the nesting cardinals and other birds are enjoying them. There will still be enough to can or freeze.
Might not be saying that much longer with the price of food today and how many people need nutritious hand outs. My local church food pantry has started carrying fresh (known) local surplus produce and I'm sure that soon enough people will be willing to pick their own since lord knows we can't pick it all for them! The birds will always have plenty of leftovers:)
Our church has a lot of property. We had a large garden to produce fresh produce for those in need. I am considering putting blueberry bushes in down there for the community
I cut the tops flat and the bottoms at and angle. Easily can distinguish how to stick. Planning on trying blueberries. I do elderberries cutting. Luck with and without cloning hormones. Thanks for quick easy instructions without crazy loud music. LOL
Should be Angle at Top, and Flat on Base !
Roots Sprout better from a sharp clean 'Flat' Cut !
Just saying. . . 😎
Best teacher on youtuber. Congrats. You are a born teacher 😊
@@christydalgaard thanks for the kind words
wow very thorough and from experience. great teacher. thanks! will do this after the snow melts!
After realizing just how close you are, I think you would do an excellent job teaching a class at the Clackamas Community College/OSU annual tree school. Even without years of experience, its clear enough you know what you're doing, and you know how to pass that knowledge on effectively. Thank you, awesome video!
Being a UA-cam channel producer myself I get your point of to many people acting like they are experts just to get views. However what many people don’t understand is many of us are simply documenting our experiences and sharing with those who care to follow. I have been given down the road by people several times. These people did not know who we were and what we were about. They just jumped to conclusions and most times its clear they didn’t watch the video. We never claim to be experts. People who follow us just enjoy watching/following the journey. By the way thanks for your video. Excellent job and I subscribed!!
Terry
Thanks for watching, kind words and perspective. I too post some videos that I don’t have a ton of experience on. I usually try to make it clear that. “ I am just trying this “ or something along those lines.
@@FlanaganHomestead I agree. I generally say "I am no expert but I would do this...".
Dude thanks!!! You are now my clone blueberries bushes hero.
8:23 good strategy, I do almost the exact same thing when propagating everything from peaches to bougainvillea to dragon fruit in Southern California; very different plants but quite similar in concept and execution. My only suggestion would be to thoroughly soak the medium and to *not* water as soon as you put the cuttings in. It's likely that you'll wash much of the rooting hormone off; I let the moisture from the medium do the work. You can also cut a 2-liter bottle or similar and create a humidity dome, that seems to help as well. I typically don't water again until there's some signs of rooting and growth. There's no sense in watering much or at all until roots form because the cuttings have little to no way of taking up water without roots
Good suggestions. Thanks for sharing.
Hi I’m new. Do you need to keep the clippings at a certain temp range?
Thank you for teaching us from experience.
Welcome. Thanks for watching.
Just found your channel. I was planning on propagating my blueberries this year but was planning on after harvest this year (now March in zone 8b). I can’t wait to try.
The Boss of blueberries.
Thank you so much for this video!! Im helping my MIL prune her bushes today and I’ll be propagating from them! My hope is to be able to sell from my plants every spring at the farmers market!
Great use of your pruning waste.
@@FlanaganHomestead What method would you recommend to propagate a goji berry tree?
@@ladominaroque sorry I have not done a goji berry so not an expert on it. If you don’t need too many plants air layering might be the best way.
I was doing grape vines like that, sized and cut the same. I found the most success with starting grape vines was in dirt where I composted oak leaves every year. Started with a two foot high pile of leaves then in the spring incorporated the leaves in the soil and planted a hedgerow of vine cuttings -- close enough in a row like a colonial fort wall.
Perfect timing! Heading out to take cuttings as soon as the temp is above 32.
It's fifty degrees and rainy... I chucked all my veg and thirty/dusty houseplants outside and let them get a good drink and shower... And I took cuttings of my blueberry bush! 🥂
Amen brother. Too many people on UA-cam act like they are professionals
Best info on blueberry propagating I've seen. Thank you.
Thank you!!!! So glad I saved your video a couple weeks ago. I pruned my blueberries today and saved trimmings to propagate. (Texada Island, Sunshine Coast, BC Canada). Your video explained the steps in an easy to follow order and very detailed manner. New subscriber because of this video. I've never pruned or propagated anything before as this is my first acreage and I can grow trees and bushes. :-) I'm feeling confident because of you.
@@cirsiumc glad you have land and can start growing plants. Good luck.
Thanks for the blueberry trimming and rooting cuttings info. I found it very helpful. I used concrete sand and just water it daily. I have the cuttings in my bedroom at this time because it's March in zone 4 WI. But in May I will put them outside, probably under a mist and possibly under shade cloth until July/Aug. Thank you so much! I bought 3yr plants online from a farm in NJ and they have done great. I planted mine in half concrete sand and half peat moss in grow bags and drag them to a covered porch every winter. I also fertilize with slow release pelletized fertilizer similar to what you used, only 2 Tbsp/plant and around not on the roots. We also put a drip line on the blueberries and they did great.
Excellent, enjoy your berries.
You remind me so much of a young Lemmy Kilmister , of Motor Head the band {but without the moles}. 100% it's a compliment. Now back to watching the video 😁.
First time here. This vid was Fantastic! Clear and informative. I learned a lot! Nice job. Thanks.
Best video on the market, Hands down. I have watched quite a few.
thanks for helping me out. I have been trying this out and didn't know everything you are talking about. I will update my process and hopefully have greater success
This is the exact information I've been looking for! Specifically about when to repot.
So glad I found your video! I rooted cuttings a couple years ago from pruned branches, and most of them took. My biggest mistake was having them in the sun, and the soil dried out. This year, I did some in 2 pots of sand. They are sitting on the north side of my greenhouse where they get mostly shade.
Excellent best of luck to you.
VERY good information! Thank you, kind sir!
@FlanaganHomestead greetings from Sweden! Thank you for sharing your advice! Hope you are enjoying your delicious precious little friends here about now. I will write this cutting taking date of late Feb due to our difference in zones.., I think I have to start an actual calendar for all the different events , it is just tooooo much to bother with, soooooo much easier to just have a list of directions. We spend our lives following other peoples lists, might as well make our own for the most important place in our entire home.
Good to know. I trimmed my blueberries winter and I thought the canes were too wimpy. I guess they were just right!! TFS
Thank you. I just bought 2 different bushes, Jelly Bean and Peach Sorbet. I'll look forward to propagating both with this information.
thank you, lots of important fine details that many have left out, as some species are very easy to propagate, many others like fruits are more difficult. I will make a special spot just for the cuttings when I am back in Ecuador, all I do remember as a child was a deep trench with sand in it.
You're awesome. Thanks for the video. Make more videos.
@@JustinWallace-oq2ot thanks for kind words. What type of video are you looking for.
@@FlanaganHomestead Let me watch all your other videos, and I will let you know.
You are a gifted teacher. Love this video.
Thanks for kind words
I recently moved to a house with blueberries and have no experience whatsoever with plants, trees, or anything green. This video says everything I needed to know about my blueberries. I was picking some and by accident I cut a branch 😢
Thank you, Flanagan for an amazing explanation. I'm going to try and see if I can make more out of it.
Keep pine bark mulch around the base if the bush...they need acidic soil
I love the taste of blueberries, if only they grow in tropical areas.
You can use strait peat moss as the medium, I’m lazy just used an old plastic wheelbarrow that had a cracked bottom filled it with peat moss and put in green cuttings when they about 18 months I planted them out.
Choose Coco core instead please. If you learn how destructive they are harvesting from peat boggs, I hope you'll stay away from it
@@Acts-1322 I’ve been told potatoes 🥔 are better for rose clippings, are the coco cores acidic enough for the blueberries? 🫐 that’s the question you need to answer?
Thank you! I have some Blueberry sprouts in a bucket, that have been there for a year that are leafed out and ready to plant. Perfect timing. 😊
@@Acts-1322 do you reside in CA, just asking.
Nice, very helpful. T Y
Thank-you!
PS.
A Stem of Willow (Tree) in warm Water : makes a Willow Bark Tea or Homemade Rooting Medium. 👍
I also leave Willow Whips in a Bucket of Water, for the Catkins to Grow and provide some real early Pollen for my Bees. Nice. 😎
I don't grow those baby Willow (Rooted Stem) Whips on as Trees. But you could. . .
Willow Trees can get really BIG ! . . . I let them polllen flower and Leaf up, right in that "Rooting" Cuttings Bucket. Here in Scotland. 🏴 (Rooted all Sorts of things in that thing.)
That Bucket stays the same way for Years !Season in, Seasons out. . . 🙃
Nice. Thanks for adding interesting concepts.
true story>>>willow lives even when it dies....I love it to use as a rooting hormone>>>one year one fell and I used the broken pieces in a bucket and let the water turn to muck>>>best rooting hormone one could use
Thank u I have tryed two times Nothing happened but no one has explained it like u and no one said a year Going to try ur way thanks
Good luck, you can do it with a little preparation and a lot of patience
EXACTLY, THEY NEVER DONE IT BEFORE! EN WE WANT TO LEARN FROM PEOPLE THAT ALREADY KNOW HOW TO DO IT AND THAT IT IS GOING TO BE A SUCCESS❤ THX.
it's amazing someone can grow that expensive plant everywere and from cuttings!
Im learning most fruit bushes work this way. Passive income anyone 😊
grow them all. we have some fabulous rose bushes I started this way.
Blackberries work well
Just before your video I watched a video about blueberry propagation it was very vague as far as information watering etc thanks for this very clear information truly appreciated… stay blessed
thanks for watching and the kind words
Excellent presentation. Clear and to the point.
Great video! Thank you. My daughter's returning from Florida and wants me start her some plants for her new house. I think ill definitely do blueberries for her.
Thank you. Good luck on your blueberries. They are a healthy treat.
Thank you so much. You are a great teacher! I love your video. Very helpful for beginners. :)
You’re a gem. Thank you for the info!
Thanks for kind words.
Everybody says you need to use rooting hormone but I took trimmings from my uncles house and stuck them on the ground cut at an angle four of them took now they are big enough I can cut root pieces. They fruited the same season. I planted them even know they were still very small.
I have had success without rooting hormone as well. Just higher success with it.
Nicely detailed information thanks Mr spokes man
I took some cuttings from pruning last week. I have them in a mason jar with rooting hormone to try and create some new bushes
@@timothyfletcher8131 love it.
Thanks for real information!
You’re welcome thanks for watching.
Great video thanks for sharing your knowledge! Will definitely give this a try!
Excellent video with good details. The amount of time is what most don’t realize. We prefer suckers for propagating, but cuttings might be the only option in some situations or for larger numbers.
Great video, Rob!!
Going to try this
Scott Jackson
Very good instructional video. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for sharing your info!
Excellent video!
Really enjoyed this. I do make videos too but like you, I will say if I'm just trying it for the first time etc. Can't stand it when someone pretends to be an expert when they're clearly not!
Great video guidance I will attempt to use your ideas. We’ll see how it goes.
Could I use pine bark? It is what is available.
Yes
dude you nailed it fantastic video all I needed to know thanks so much
Nice video. I'll give blueberries another shot when I do my pruning. I think blueberry cuttings are a bit more temperamental than some others (figs, currants, elderberry), but I'm inspired to try again.
Good luck. I think you will have success
I learned by propegating elderberries. Eventually the experience helped: finding the right time for me to take the cuttings and experimenting with ways to root them. Had almost no success with cuttings ordered through the mail. I purchased two fine young elders from a nursery so now the cuttings are put to root right away. Looking forward to blueberries.
Great information, thanks!
Amazing info. Thanks so much for this (👍 from Australia)
Thanks for watching
I enjoyed your video. I have four blueberry bushes in pots that are not doing that great. I incorporated peat, and compost in my soil.
Often blueberry bushes don’t do well in pots if the soil doesn’t drain well. Could that be the case in your scenarios. I had one in a pot a few year ago that was struggling. I thought it had good soil. When I moved the bush out of the pot the soil on the bottom was so compacted nothing could get through.
@@FlanaganHomestead
They’re draining well, I watch them after I water them to make sure they have good drainage . I made sure the soil mixture was as per instructions for bushes in pots. Peat, compost, and coarse sand. And a couple of times in the summer I added an acidifier.
@@samueljaramillo4221 do you have a way to test soil ph. Most soil that has compost and watered a lot tend to be somewhat acidic. You may have pushed it a hair too far
@@FlanaganHomestead
yes I do have a ph test kit. I will test it and see what’s going on. I don’t like to over water. I water once a week here in the hot, dry southwest. Water is too expensive here.
@@samueljaramillo4221 if you are in a hot climate and they are in pots you might likely be under watering. Potted plants can’t draw up water from surrounding soil. Here in the Pacific Northwest, which is much cooler, during the summer they water potted blueberries at least once a day. I believe more than once if it is a hot day. Like 90 degrees and above.
Really good video! Thanks.
Very nice and informative video. One suggestion: Can you include in each gardening video the Hardiness Zone you are operating in? Otherwise excellent video. Thanks
@@gthomas4371 will try to remember to add this info. Thanks for constructive criticism
Awesome video. I need that sprinkler set up lol
I found the video very helpful. I have not yet been successful with blueberries. I have sand on hand and I will be trying again.
Did you tried? How’s your success? I tried different method and it 100% failed. Have to try this way
Not yet, Didn't want to cut on my only good blueberry bush. Bought a couple more.
This was so helpful
I agree that many people are just making UA-cam . But after many tries and only a few successes I am still trying. . My only success was using just plain old sand and I place them in a shade under a leaky fawset. My patience came from forgetting that I put them there.
Sometimes, we give a little of what the plants need and get out of the way(forget about them) they do well.
Lol. Love this!🤓
Very helpful. I’ll try using sand this season! This explains why my clippings always get moldy using topsoil
Hi, Great video. Some people doing this cover there propagation buckets. I see that you do not. I believe that they water it once, cover it and leave it on the north side. Do you have a comment?
@@joealati many of the people that water once cover and wait are doing softwood cuttings, which is another good technique. It is important to keep moisture on both roots and leaves in that scenario. I do hardwood cuttings in the winter to take advantage of branches cut off during pruning. No leaves at this time to evaporate moisture. So the cover is not as vital. I keep the medium moist and yes still keep on the north side of a structure.
Excellent video with exact information.I have a question->My place is pretty close to the sea, about 2.600 feet above the sea level,on the north/northeast facing slope of a mountain.We have (in general) wet climate,with long hot summers and short-ish/windy/wet harsh winters with lots of snow.Not good for leaving cuttings outside. Ice and wind don't help. So, I take rose tree/pomegranate tree/olive tree cuttings in the winter, late November,after prunning and keep the cuttings in a plastic bag in the fridge.Our freezing/windy months are mostly February and March with night time temperatures dropping under 25F very frequently.Towards the end of March/beginning April, I take the cuttings off the fridge and put them in a bucket of water for about 2-3 weeks.Than I plant them in individual pots in loose soil/bark with a clear plastic bottle on top of them and keep them in a place with lots of light,but not much straight sun on them.Soil always moist,of course.I had pretty good success. You think that I should apply the same strategy with blueberry cuttings?Can I keep them in the fridge for months??Should I first clean the cuttings from their fruit buds?
Good technique. I think most of what you have been doing would work for blueberries. Definitely best to cut off fruiting buds of your cuttings.
Great video, thank you so much, i dont have for bark, would pine bark or pine needles work in your opinion? Or peat moss? thank you
Pine bark should work well. Good Luck
@@FlanaganHomestead thank you so much!
Great video man
Great tips, thanks for sharing
Have you ever tried adding bottom heat to blueberry cuttings, and leaving them outside in the shade and cool late winter/spring weather? The thing I’ve heard is the warmth on the root system promotes callusing and getting a start on root development while the leaf buds above ground, in cooler air, stay dormant. The reasoning is that there could be better success because the leaves and their moisture requirement needs will be more easily satisfied by a better established root system.
That said, I have only one year of trying blueberry cuttings in an inert material like you show here, but without any bottom heat or greenhouse warmth. So I have little experience and results. I’m just searching for what works and maybe you’ll have feedback or try something new and be able to report more useful results than I can now.
Thanks! It was encouraging to see your successes.
Thanks for sharing this technique. I had not heard of it or tried it. The logic behind it is sound. I wish I could give you more info on this but I have not done it. I do currently have a free heat mat. I may take some of this years cuttings and put it on them outdoors to see what happens.
I've done it with a sand/peat mix and had success. My two tips are many cuttings for a better chance of a win and for me in zone 4, don't leave them outside for the first winter. I have an unheated walkout basement that is still cold but not freezing it catches daylight and acts like a greenhouse in the spring. My cuttings get a mild winter so they can go doormat but not like outside where they freeze so hard and die.
Good plan
Good info. Thanks
Keeping them in shade outdoors in zone 7 winter is okay? Also seen some folks use a humidity dome. Is that required? Thanks!
The humidity dome is required when doing softwood cuttings in early summer when there is already leaves on the branches. Hardwood cutting don't require this. I have never used them.
@@FlanaganHomestead Awesome!
Great tips. Thank you, sir. A new subscriber here.
Louie CK is homesteading?! Awesome!
Great video so can these freeze solid in there pots over winter
Mine did. We don’t have extreme cold but we had several nights with temps in the teens. The small pots were completely frozen.
@@FlanaganHomesteadwere they ok? I have a bunch in my zone 4 greenhouse
WARNING/UPDATE!
do not use mushroom or cow manure with blueberries! It raises the pH to fatal levels. Prob other berries too
Nitrates in manure is the killer.
Great video - very helpful!
Do you have a video on how to prune blueberry bushes?
The following link is for a video I made with the field boss of a major blueberry farm. ua-cam.com/video/5O-K5dSMxeY/v-deo.html
right....i have been propagating with fruit buds lol. No wonder they fail. Thanks!!
We all learn something new every day. Just keep growing.
Good advice thanks
Can you do it in autumn too? Like as soon as the leaves have fallen of?
Or is there a benefit to be doing it in winter rather than autumn? I’m new to this but I was thinking if it could give the cutting a head start with rooting if they are taken in autumn- a little bit like it works with autumn sowing perennials or cold hardy annual flowers. Thanks for a great video! 😊🌸
@@hannablom5803 that is a very good question. I honestly have never tried it in autumn. Not sure the roots would start during the dormant time of year. Mine start in January because I place them in a warmer space. This is after they have had a few months of the natural dormant season. I don’t know if you can completely skip the dormancy and have success.
After the cuttings develop a small root system, where should they be placed over winter? Can they be planted outside in the garden or should they be placed in a cool location inside like a basement to overwinter?
Did you ever get a reply? I am wondering the same thing. I live in Kansas and it gets cold here and wonder if I should move them into the barn or leave outside orbring int he house.
@@johntytla2968 No reply. Some of my cuttings have new leaves and others are still just green stems. I put mine in my garage next to a east facing window and the temperature stays above freezing. I'll know next spring what happens. I don't let them dry out and check a few times a week. So far so good. Good Luck.
I leave mine in the pots outside. Layers of mulch help from getting too cold. The winters here are not too severe so leaving outside and getting the natural dormant period is good. Is you get down to single digits often, I would find a place that is still cold but not frigid. Pump house, garage, insulated shop.
@@FlanaganHomestead I was considering putting my cuttings and plants outside, but I have trouble with squirrels and deer that eat just about everything. If I put a pot outside the squirrel's will dig in the pot and knock it over. the only garden I can have is one with a high wire fence around it or I won't have anything left. I like experimenting with everything and anything, that's why I'm playing around with propagating Blue Berries. If I have success with the Blue Berries, I'm not sure what I'll do with them. To many interests, to little time, and jack of all trades, master of none. Just plain crazy LOL
@@luigi5890 sorry about the animals. It is good to have many interests. Keeps the mind sharp
Could I use sphagnum peat moss in my pots as a medium?
I suppose you could. Pest moss is fairly inert. It is acidic so it would be harmful for many plants. However blueberries like acidic soil so you might be able to pull it off.
Thank you for such a quick response. I appreciate it.
Thanks
Thank you. Makes perfect sense.
I bought a plant from WM and took ot apart to plant and got the full root, plus a small cutting that i guess the just threw in like wgaf amd i have had that small piece in a plastic cup with a clear plastic cup on top as a small green house and it to my surprise began to root and grow, so i technically got 2 BB plants out of the one i bought at wally world
Sweet you got a bonus. Love it when it works that way.
Question: I have a very old blueberry patch (30+ years) that produces tons of giant blueberries every year. There is a complete carpet of new growth underneath the large bushes sprouting from the mature root system . Can I cut these new stem sprouts to propagate and does it have to be in January? Thank you for the great video.
You can cut those, they will work. You do not have to do it in January. I do it in the winter because I use a hardwood cutting technique. Many people prefer propagating from a softwood cutting done late spring with new growth. I have not posted a video of this technique but many people have.
Probably they are suckers and already have roots on them, so you could try dig some up and replant.
Have you had success rooting at any other time of year ? Thank you for this video .
I have done some softwood cuttings but I prefer to do hardwood because I am using the waste material and I have more time to dedicate to getting them started.
Great video! Have you ever tried airlayering blueberries?
I have not air layered blueberries. I am getting some supplies to air layer fruit trees this year. I might do a blueberry or two while I am at it.
@@FlanaganHomestead that's great, you just earned a new subscriber
Thank you sir 🙏🏻
Thank you so much for such a great and informative video! Do you think Coconut coir would work as a medium?
I have never used it before but it has the two main characteristics we are looking for. It is an inert medium and it holds moisture. I am guessing you can have success with it.
@@FlanaganHomesteadThank you so much for responding! My blueberries are already setting flowers but I will definitely give it a try this coming winter.