Will backening plumeria cutting root?
I was wondering....when plumeria cuttings have started that fungus rot (I
think it is because of fungus) on the rooting end, that is, it is starting to get blackened and "mushy", will the cutting still root? Or should I re-cut the cutting above where the blackening begins, let it sit for some days until a new callous is formed, and then plant? What about if I just cut off the blackened part and immediately plant it? Will the lack of a callous on the end prevent it from rooting? |
Will backening plumeria cutting root?
No
Just throw them away The fungal hyphae permeate the plant tissue long before they show signs of rot. "Jimbo" wrote in message ... I was wondering....when plumeria cuttings have started that fungus rot (I think it is because of fungus) on the rooting end, that is, it is starting to get blackened and "mushy", will the cutting still root? Or should I re-cut the cutting above where the blackening begins, let it sit for some days until a new callous is formed, and then plant? What about if I just cut off the blackened part and immediately plant it? Will the lack of a callous on the end prevent it from rooting? |
Will backening plumeria cutting root?
No
Just throw them away The fungal hyphae permeate the plant tissue long before they show signs of rot. "Jimbo" wrote in message ... I was wondering....when plumeria cuttings have started that fungus rot (I think it is because of fungus) on the rooting end, that is, it is starting to get blackened and "mushy", will the cutting still root? Or should I re-cut the cutting above where the blackening begins, let it sit for some days until a new callous is formed, and then plant? What about if I just cut off the blackened part and immediately plant it? Will the lack of a callous on the end prevent it from rooting? |
Will backening plumeria cutting root?
No
Just throw them away The fungal hyphae permeate the plant tissue long before they show signs of rot. "Jimbo" wrote in message ... I was wondering....when plumeria cuttings have started that fungus rot (I think it is because of fungus) on the rooting end, that is, it is starting to get blackened and "mushy", will the cutting still root? Or should I re-cut the cutting above where the blackening begins, let it sit for some days until a new callous is formed, and then plant? What about if I just cut off the blackened part and immediately plant it? Will the lack of a callous on the end prevent it from rooting? |
Will backening plumeria cutting root?
"Jimbo" in :
I was wondering....when plumeria cuttings have started that fungus rot (I think it is because of fungus) on the rooting end, that is, it is starting to get blackened and "mushy", will the cutting still root? Or should I re-cut the cutting above where the blackening begins, let it sit for some days until a new callous is formed, and then plant? What about if I just cut off the blackened part and immediately plant it? Will the lack of a callous on the end prevent it from rooting? i don't know where p's form new roots. this http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&l... s&btnG=Search suggests they form roots from the callus, so i'd guess that no roots will grow from mush... as *you* also have been suspecting :-) |
Will backening plumeria cutting root?
"Jimbo" in :
I was wondering....when plumeria cuttings have started that fungus rot (I think it is because of fungus) on the rooting end, that is, it is starting to get blackened and "mushy", will the cutting still root? Or should I re-cut the cutting above where the blackening begins, let it sit for some days until a new callous is formed, and then plant? What about if I just cut off the blackened part and immediately plant it? Will the lack of a callous on the end prevent it from rooting? i don't know where p's form new roots. this http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&l... s&btnG=Search suggests they form roots from the callus, so i'd guess that no roots will grow from mush... as *you* also have been suspecting :-) |
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