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Old 07-10-2003, 03:10 AM
gary
 
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Default Rooted cutting

I just received a "plant" from Direct Gardening. It is sold as a
hydrangea Mounds of Snow $5.95. The stem is about 3 inches out of the
dirt. Does this qualify as a plant or a rooted cutting?

Gary


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Old 07-10-2003, 05:22 AM
Madgardener
 
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Default Rooted cutting

sounds like a rooted cutting. If you gently pull, does it have little roots
or a good set of them? It will seen to take your plant forever to grow into
a good size bush from the sounds of this. what possessed you to spend $5.95
for a small plant of this variety? I do understand though......... If the
pot is a four inch one, it will take it three years to get to blooming size.
But have faith, rich, humusy soil, moisture, shade with dappled sunlight and
it will thrive and you will be bragging to us how many flowers she gives
you. (I have to say, $6 for a stem sounds like quite a bit. I hope the best
for you)
madgardener
"gary" wrote in message
...
I just received a "plant" from Direct Gardening. It is sold as a
hydrangea Mounds of Snow $5.95. The stem is about 3 inches out of the
dirt. Does this qualify as a plant or a rooted cutting?

Gary




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Old 07-10-2003, 06:02 PM
Frogleg
 
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Default Rooted cutting

On Mon, 6 Oct 2003 19:55:51 -0700, "gary"
wrote:

I just received a "plant" from Direct Gardening. It is sold as a
hydrangea Mounds of Snow $5.95. The stem is about 3 inches out of the
dirt. Does this qualify as a plant or a rooted cutting?


It may even be an *unrooted* cutting. IMHO, calling this a "plant" is
a deception.
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