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j west +++ 22-07-2004 12:42 AM

propogating and rooting mermaid vine
 
hi, i want to propogate some mermaid vine. i remember a long while ago
seeing someone put them in water to root. how should i prune them to do
this. should the joints where the new stems come from be at the bottom?
would roots come out from that point?
many thanks. john west



Sacha 22-07-2004 12:44 AM

propogating and rooting mermaid vine
 
On 18/7/04 12:02 pm, in article , "j
west +++" wrote:

hi, i want to propogate some mermaid vine. i remember a long while ago
seeing someone put them in water to root. how should i prune them to do
this. should the joints where the new stems come from be at the bottom?
would roots come out from that point?
many thanks. john west


Assuming this means Rhoicissus rhombifolium, the RHS Encyclopedia says by
seed in spring or by semi-ripe cuttings in summer but gives no more
indication than that. Just nip a few pieces off and try them out. Perhaps
taking some bits just above a node would be a good thing to experiment with,
too. Rooting things in water seems to take ages (probably because you can
watch it) so don't give up too soon!
--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
(remove the weeds after garden to email me)


Mike Lyle 22-07-2004 12:47 AM

propogating and rooting mermaid vine
 
"j west +++" wrote in message ...
hi, i want to propogate some mermaid vine. i remember a long while ago
seeing someone put them in water to root. how should i prune them to do
this. should the joints where the new stems come from be at the bottom?
would roots come out from that point?
many thanks. john west


If this is 'Grape Ivy', aka 'Cissus rhombifolia', it should be easy
enough to root from stem cuttings now, though I think it's getting a
bit late. I wouldn't use water, as water-roots can be difficult to
transfer to potting mixture.

Take a nice shoot: you want one with leaves at the top and bottom, and
somewhere vaguely around 4" long. Cut cleanly just below a
leaf-joint, gently take the leaves off the bottom half, and stick in a
?3" pot of moist (not soggy) half-grit and half-potting mixture. Put
it in a shady but reasonably warm place, cover with a plastic bag not
touching the leaves, and wait till you see new leaves beginning to
grow at the top; then you can move it into a slightly bigger pot.

Better houseplant gardeners than I may contradict, of course.

Mike.

Sacha 22-07-2004 06:18 PM

propogating and rooting mermaid vine
 
On 18/7/04 12:02 pm, in article , "j
west +++" wrote:

hi, i want to propogate some mermaid vine. i remember a long while ago
seeing someone put them in water to root. how should i prune them to do
this. should the joints where the new stems come from be at the bottom?
would roots come out from that point?
many thanks. john west


Assuming this means Rhoicissus rhombifolium, the RHS Encyclopedia says by
seed in spring or by semi-ripe cuttings in summer but gives no more
indication than that. Just nip a few pieces off and try them out. Perhaps
taking some bits just above a node would be a good thing to experiment with,
too. Rooting things in water seems to take ages (probably because you can
watch it) so don't give up too soon!
--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
(remove the weeds after garden to email me)



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