Plant Cloner
On Oct 19, 8:17 pm, "Pavel314" wrote:
My wife just bought a plant cloner, which looks like a picnic cooler with a
clear top. You place cuttings in a holder so that they're suspended in mid
air over the tank. Grow lights above and below a pump continuously sprays an
aerated nutrient enzyme broth on the bottom half of the cuttings, which
encourages them to root.
I'd like to use this on some cuttings from my vineyard and the quince tree.
(We're still debating the wisdom of propagating the medlar.) My question to
the group is whether or not the grapes and quinces need to go dormant for a
while before putting them into the cloner.
We've had a late summer here in Maryland, U.S.A., and all of the trees and
vines are still fully leafed. I have enough stock to try cuttings without
giving them a winter's rest but wonder which approach would work better.
Paul
Aerocloners work great with soft cuttings. If it's a woody cutting,
try
heeling it in outdoors in a sand-filled trench until spring. Wound
the
stem and heel in deep, leaving just the terminal bud uncovered.
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