Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Fragipani cuttings
Edited
Good luck with your cuttings. Take a photo of your tree, just in case the cuttings don't make it and keep in touch, because who knows what colours the seedlings I bought on eBay will be, the expensive one 'should' be deep red because that's why I paid all the $$$'s. thats a really good idea i might just do that They are a 'beautiful' flower and perfume, aren't they? Just divine in the evenings. i got to say i am not too enamoured with the tree its self but the Flowers are great, especialy with my pond benath it, when the fall inot the water they look great Cheers |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Fragipani cuttings
Hi Pete....technically do everything Bronwyn said. However I'm Fangipanni
mad, and have an embarrassing (to family and friends) tendancy to hack bits off vulnerable frangipannis (not from people's gardens of course) at any time. I let them dry out, whack into some well drained potting mix and voila! Of course, you'd have a higher chance of the thing surviving if you did it properly, but I believe the most important bit is to let it dry out/callous over for a week or two first, then make sure it's not waterlogged. Our Big W also had some recently, Darwin Sunrise being the one I bought, as it's a lovely deep red with yellow centre and slightly ruffled petals...might be worth a look! "Peter" wrote in message ... Edited Good luck with your cuttings. Take a photo of your tree, just in case the cuttings don't make it and keep in touch, because who knows what colours the seedlings I bought on eBay will be, the expensive one 'should' be deep red because that's why I paid all the $$$'s. thats a really good idea i might just do that They are a 'beautiful' flower and perfume, aren't they? Just divine in the evenings. i got to say i am not too enamoured with the tree its self but the Flowers are great, especialy with my pond benath it, when the fall inot the water they look great Cheers |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Fragipani cuttings
thanks meeee
mine has pink and white petals with a yellowish core in them I took 4 cuttings and have em out in the sun now . hope it works Cheers pete meeee wrote: Hi Pete....technically do everything Bronwyn said. However I'm Fangipanni mad, and have an embarrassing (to family and friends) tendancy to hack bits off vulnerable frangipannis (not from people's gardens of course) at any time. I let them dry out, whack into some well drained potting mix and voila! Of course, you'd have a higher chance of the thing surviving if you did it properly, but I believe the most important bit is to let it dry out/callous over for a week or two first, then make sure it's not waterlogged. Our Big W also had some recently, Darwin Sunrise being the one I bought, as it's a lovely deep red with yellow centre and slightly ruffled petals...might be worth a look! "Peter" wrote in message ... Edited Good luck with your cuttings. Take a photo of your tree, just in case the cuttings don't make it and keep in touch, because who knows what colours the seedlings I bought on eBay will be, the expensive one 'should' be deep red because that's why I paid all the $$$'s. thats a really good idea i might just do that They are a 'beautiful' flower and perfume, aren't they? Just divine in the evenings. i got to say i am not too enamoured with the tree its self but the Flowers are great, especialy with my pond benath it, when the fall inot the water they look great Cheers |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Fragipani cuttings
"Peter" wrote in message ... thanks meeee mine has pink and white petals with a yellowish core in them I took 4 cuttings and have em out in the sun now . hope it works Cheers pete meeee wrote: Hi Pete....technically do everything Bronwyn said. However I'm Fangipanni mad, and have an embarrassing (to family and friends) tendancy to hack bits off vulnerable frangipannis (not from people's gardens of course) at any time. I let them dry out, whack into some well drained potting mix and voila! Of course, you'd have a higher chance of the thing surviving if you did it properly, but I believe the most important bit is to let it dry out/callous over for a week or two first, then make sure it's not waterlogged. Our Big W also had some recently, Darwin Sunrise being the one I bought, as it's a lovely deep red with yellow centre and slightly ruffled petals...might be worth a look! "Peter" wrote in message ... Edited Good luck with your cuttings. Take a photo of your tree, just in case the cuttings don't make it and keep in touch, because who knows what colours the seedlings I bought on eBay will be, the expensive one 'should' be deep red because that's why I paid all the $$$'s. thats a really good idea i might just do that They are a 'beautiful' flower and perfume, aren't they? Just divine in the evenings. i got to say i am not too enamoured with the tree its self but the Flowers are great, especialy with my pond benath it, when the fall inot the water they look great Cheers I used to do the drying of the stems but found I lost a few. Someone told me to wrap them in newspaper and dunk them in a bucket of water. 100% success and better root systems. This is better for pinks and reds as they seem to have a different sort of stem to the whites and tricolours that grow in the temperate zones. Anyways my 2 bobs worth. Cheers Richard |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Fragipani cuttings
"Loosecanon" wrote in message ... "Peter" wrote in message ... thanks meeee mine has pink and white petals with a yellowish core in them I took 4 cuttings and have em out in the sun now . hope it works Cheers pete meeee wrote: Hi Pete....technically do everything Bronwyn said. However I'm Fangipanni mad, and have an embarrassing (to family and friends) tendancy to hack bits off vulnerable frangipannis (not from people's gardens of course) at any time. I let them dry out, whack into some well drained potting mix and voila! Of course, you'd have a higher chance of the thing surviving if you did it properly, but I believe the most important bit is to let it dry out/callous over for a week or two first, then make sure it's not waterlogged. Our Big W also had some recently, Darwin Sunrise being the one I bought, as it's a lovely deep red with yellow centre and slightly ruffled petals...might be worth a look! "Peter" wrote in message ... Edited Good luck with your cuttings. Take a photo of your tree, just in case the cuttings don't make it and keep in touch, because who knows what colours the seedlings I bought on eBay will be, the expensive one 'should' be deep red because that's why I paid all the $$$'s. thats a really good idea i might just do that They are a 'beautiful' flower and perfume, aren't they? Just divine in the evenings. i got to say i am not too enamoured with the tree its self but the Flowers are great, especialy with my pond benath it, when the fall inot the water they look great Cheers I used to do the drying of the stems but found I lost a few. Someone told me to wrap them in newspaper and dunk them in a bucket of water. 100% success and better root systems. This is better for pinks and reds as they seem to have a different sort of stem to the whites and tricolours that grow in the temperate zones. Anyways my 2 bobs worth. Cheers Richard Thanks for this! I've had trouble with the pinks and reds as well, so this will be worth a try. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Fragipani cuttings
"meeee" writes:
Thanks for this! I've had trouble with the pinks and reds as well, so this will be worth a try. I used to regularly walk past a garden with a frangipani whose flowers were such a dark purple as to be practially black. They were smallish and not as attractive as the common frangi, but such a novelty. Unfortunately the branches were out of reach from the street :-( and I wasn't brave enough to knock and ask whether I could please have a cutting. Then one day I discovered that the tree had been cut back to just a stump! It never regrew, so my opportunity to own a black frangipani slipped by! There weren't even any prunings piled up anywhere that I could rifle. -- John Savage (my news address is not valid for email) |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Fragipani cuttings
"John Savage" wrote in message om... "meeee" writes: Thanks for this! I've had trouble with the pinks and reds as well, so this will be worth a try. I used to regularly walk past a garden with a frangipani whose flowers were such a dark purple as to be practially black. They were smallish and not as attractive as the common frangi, but such a novelty. Unfortunately the branches were out of reach from the street :-( and I wasn't brave enough to knock and ask whether I could please have a cutting. Then one day I discovered that the tree had been cut back to just a stump! It never regrew, so my opportunity to own a black frangipani slipped by! There weren't even any prunings piled up anywhere that I could rifle. -- John Savage (my news address is not valid for email) ARGH!! Those HEATHENS!!! *Sigh* And they probably never knew what they had either.... |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Fragipani cuttings
G'day Richard
Thanks for that info....seems if I 'had' been able to get the pink cuttings I might have stuffed up anyway!! LOL How long do you dunk them in the bucket of water? Just until the newspaper is saturated? and how long until you plant them? Had noticed a lovely deep black/red on eBay but wasn't online when the auction closed. Bronwyn ;-) Loosecanon wrote: "Peter" wrote in message ... thanks meeee mine has pink and white petals with a yellowish core in them I took 4 cuttings and have em out in the sun now . hope it works Cheers pete meeee wrote: Hi Pete....technically do everything Bronwyn said. However I'm Fangipanni mad, and have an embarrassing (to family and friends) tendancy to hack bits off vulnerable frangipannis (not from people's gardens of course) at any time. I let them dry out, whack into some well drained potting mix and voila! Of course, you'd have a higher chance of the thing surviving if you did it properly, but I believe the most important bit is to let it dry out/callous over for a week or two first, then make sure it's not waterlogged. Our Big W also had some recently, Darwin Sunrise being the one I bought, as it's a lovely deep red with yellow centre and slightly ruffled petals...might be worth a look! "Peter" wrote in message ... Edited Good luck with your cuttings. Take a photo of your tree, just in case the cuttings don't make it and keep in touch, because who knows what colours the seedlings I bought on eBay will be, the expensive one 'should' be deep red because that's why I paid all the $$$'s. thats a really good idea i might just do that They are a 'beautiful' flower and perfume, aren't they? Just divine in the evenings. i got to say i am not too enamoured with the tree its self but the Flowers are great, especialy with my pond benath it, when the fall inot the water they look great Cheers I used to do the drying of the stems but found I lost a few. Someone told me to wrap them in newspaper and dunk them in a bucket of water. 100% success and better root systems. This is better for pinks and reds as they seem to have a different sort of stem to the whites and tricolours that grow in the temperate zones. Anyways my 2 bobs worth. Cheers Richard |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Fragipani cuttings
"HC" wrote in message ... G'day Richard Thanks for that info....seems if I 'had' been able to get the pink cuttings I might have stuffed up anyway!! LOL How long do you dunk them in the bucket of water? Just until the newspaper is saturated? and how long until you plant them? Had noticed a lovely deep black/red on eBay but wasn't online when the auction closed. Bronwyn ;-) Loosecanon wrote: "Peter" wrote in message ... thanks meeee mine has pink and white petals with a yellowish core in them I took 4 cuttings and have em out in the sun now . hope it works Cheers pete meeee wrote: Hi Pete....technically do everything Bronwyn said. However I'm Fangipanni mad, and have an embarrassing (to family and friends) tendancy to hack bits off vulnerable frangipannis (not from people's gardens of course) at any time. I let them dry out, whack into some well drained potting mix and voila! Of course, you'd have a higher chance of the thing surviving if you did it properly, but I believe the most important bit is to let it dry out/callous over for a week or two first, then make sure it's not waterlogged. Our Big W also had some recently, Darwin Sunrise being the one I bought, as it's a lovely deep red with yellow centre and slightly ruffled petals...might be worth a look! "Peter" wrote in message ... Edited Good luck with your cuttings. Take a photo of your tree, just in case the cuttings don't make it and keep in touch, because who knows what colours the seedlings I bought on eBay will be, the expensive one 'should' be deep red because that's why I paid all the $$$'s. thats a really good idea i might just do that They are a 'beautiful' flower and perfume, aren't they? Just divine in the evenings. i got to say i am not too enamoured with the tree its self but the Flowers are great, especialy with my pond benath it, when the fall inot the water they look great Cheers I used to do the drying of the stems but found I lost a few. Someone told me to wrap them in newspaper and dunk them in a bucket of water. 100% success and better root systems. This is better for pinks and reds as they seem to have a different sort of stem to the whites and tricolours that grow in the temperate zones. Anyways my 2 bobs worth. Cheers Richard I tried it with white frangapani cuttings a friend dropped around. I had six of them I think and they had leaves on. Anyways I just wrapped some newspaper around them and an elastic band around the top and bottom. I checked about 2 months later. Water was nice a green and the mosquitos were loving it. The newspaper stopped any green slime and all had roots. I just transferred these to pots and carefully added soil so as to not do to much damage to the roots. I like this method because when you dry them they tend to shrivel in the stem. This way in the water the stems seemed to be as big as I started with. Give it a go you have nothing to lose. Experiment with white first as it seems to be as common as mud. Cheers Richard |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Fragipani cuttings
G'day Richard
Thanks very much for that info.......I will try it once my seedling trees are big enough to scavenge some cuttings. I've noticed some ?rooted cuttings with shrivelled stems so have steered clear of buying those because I was unsure if they would survive, your findings do seem more common sense in this regard. Thanks again Bronwyn ;-) Loosecanon wrote: "HC" wrote in message ... G'day Richard Thanks for that info....seems if I 'had' been able to get the pink cuttings I might have stuffed up anyway!! LOL How long do you dunk them in the bucket of water? Just until the newspaper is saturated? and how long until you plant them? Had noticed a lovely deep black/red on eBay but wasn't online when the auction closed. Bronwyn ;-) Loosecanon wrote: "Peter" wrote in message ... thanks meeee mine has pink and white petals with a yellowish core in them I took 4 cuttings and have em out in the sun now . hope it works Cheers pete meeee wrote: Hi Pete....technically do everything Bronwyn said. However I'm Fangipanni mad, and have an embarrassing (to family and friends) tendancy to hack bits off vulnerable frangipannis (not from people's gardens of course) at any time. I let them dry out, whack into some well drained potting mix and voila! Of course, you'd have a higher chance of the thing surviving if you did it properly, but I believe the most important bit is to let it dry out/callous over for a week or two first, then make sure it's not waterlogged. Our Big W also had some recently, Darwin Sunrise being the one I bought, as it's a lovely deep red with yellow centre and slightly ruffled petals...might be worth a look! "Peter" wrote in message ... Edited Good luck with your cuttings. Take a photo of your tree, just in case the cuttings don't make it and keep in touch, because who knows what colours the seedlings I bought on eBay will be, the expensive one 'should' be deep red because that's why I paid all the $$$'s. thats a really good idea i might just do that They are a 'beautiful' flower and perfume, aren't they? Just divine in the evenings. i got to say i am not too enamoured with the tree its self but the Flowers are great, especialy with my pond benath it, when the fall inot the water they look great Cheers I used to do the drying of the stems but found I lost a few. Someone told me to wrap them in newspaper and dunk them in a bucket of water. 100% success and better root systems. This is better for pinks and reds as they seem to have a different sort of stem to the whites and tricolours that grow in the temperate zones. Anyways my 2 bobs worth. Cheers Richard I tried it with white frangapani cuttings a friend dropped around. I had six of them I think and they had leaves on. Anyways I just wrapped some newspaper around them and an elastic band around the top and bottom. I checked about 2 months later. Water was nice a green and the mosquitos were loving it. The newspaper stopped any green slime and all had roots. I just transferred these to pots and carefully added soil so as to not do to much damage to the roots. I like this method because when you dry them they tend to shrivel in the stem. This way in the water the stems seemed to be as big as I started with. Give it a go you have nothing to lose. Experiment with white first as it seems to be as common as mud. Cheers Richard |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
Fragipani cuttings
ahh lovely Send me a cutting if they work! Just kidding; hope it works
for you. I might suggest putting them in the shade to dry out though, sun might be a bit harsh at this time of year. "Peter" wrote in message ... thanks meeee mine has pink and white petals with a yellowish core in them I took 4 cuttings and have em out in the sun now . hope it works Cheers pete meeee wrote: Hi Pete....technically do everything Bronwyn said. However I'm Fangipanni mad, and have an embarrassing (to family and friends) tendancy to hack bits off vulnerable frangipannis (not from people's gardens of course) at any time. I let them dry out, whack into some well drained potting mix and voila! Of course, you'd have a higher chance of the thing surviving if you did it properly, but I believe the most important bit is to let it dry out/callous over for a week or two first, then make sure it's not waterlogged. Our Big W also had some recently, Darwin Sunrise being the one I bought, as it's a lovely deep red with yellow centre and slightly ruffled petals...might be worth a look! "Peter" wrote in message ... Edited Good luck with your cuttings. Take a photo of your tree, just in case the cuttings don't make it and keep in touch, because who knows what colours the seedlings I bought on eBay will be, the expensive one 'should' be deep red because that's why I paid all the $$$'s. thats a really good idea i might just do that They are a 'beautiful' flower and perfume, aren't they? Just divine in the evenings. i got to say i am not too enamoured with the tree its self but the Flowers are great, especialy with my pond benath it, when the fall inot the water they look great Cheers |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Rock elm cuttings no go, but sour cherry cuttings are going | Plant Science | |||
[IBC] Suckers as cuttings | Bonsai | |||
succulent cuttings | Gardening | |||
cactus cuttings | Gardening | |||
Cuttings, and trading roses | Roses |