New roots = more buds! This is all the encouragement I needed to give it a try in my future grow. Tons of willow trees growing all around!it will probably help grow roots anytime.
Make sure to keep us informed of the results!going to try it too myself whats it going to hurt?
where the fuck are all the willow trees at?!? none around here. sucks. anything else work?
It seems you've got a clone survival issue, it's not that hard even without root hormone. Temperature, humidity, medium, light, several things can influence the success rate.I have a lot of willows... weeping willows and pussy willows.... maby this will help me finally keep a clone alive!! I bet I've lost 20 over the last month, never gotten one to root!
It seems you've got a clone survival issue, it's not that hard even without root hormone. Temperature, humidity, medium, light, several things can influence the success rate.
What's your method?
Assumed to have been discovered by Native Americans homemade willow water is a pragmatic rooting stimulant.where the fuck are all the willow trees at?!? none around here. sucks. anything else work?
I agree. I used to use rooting hormone in rockwool cubes for cloning. Switched to rapid rooter plugs (with NO rooting hormone)...and that worked better. Now I just use a bubbler and plain water. As far as I can tell, keeping the water as close to 72 deg F as possible (I use an aquarium heater) gives the best results. I suspect you're right about the bubble size...but I just use plenty of cheap air stones and it works great. 7-10 days consistently.i never heard of rooting gels/hormones or lunar phased cloning before....haha, man i'm green and capitalism is thriving.
i have never failed to clone a plant (never tried a hardwood though) using a gallon jug full of plain water, plenty of light, and an ordinary aerator
plants want to live...if you made a proper cutting, it will.
the key for me is bubble size...lore has it, the smaller the air bubble, the more slowly it will rise, giving it more time to dissolve in the water.
A large 20mm bubble has a working surface area of 12.6 cm2.
the same amount of air can create 260 small 3mm bubbles having a total surface area of 83.6 cm2.