layering your garden

DuluthDankMaster

Well-Known Member
When you are an owner of a nursery you tend to pick up a bit of information here and then and when combined with nearly 4 decades of this type of growing it does add up over time.


If you want or need more information about serpentine (compound) layering just Google it and you will find a good deal of info.

Then there was the small bit about it above to begin with.

Compound (serpentine) layering is similar to simple layering, but several layers can result from a single stem. Bend the stem to the rooting medium as for simple layering, but alternately cover and expose sections of the stem. Each section should have at least one bud exposed and one bud covered with soil. Wound the lower side of each stem section to be covered (Figure 3). This method works well for plants producing vine-like growth such as heart-leaf philodendron, pothos, wisteria, clematis, and grapes.
Figure 3.
nursery owner....thats pretty sweet bro, thats what i am aspiring towards now with my schooling, i want to open up a greenhouse/nursery/grow store. cool to see someone else doing similar things yet still keeping the sweet spot for the good plant. happy growing. DDM
 

gantsa

Well-Known Member
What are you talking about is CLONING.

In normall cloning:
-u choose and cut the most soft stems of the plant, thus have a more fast root development when you will put them in soil. (In layering you wait more time from a long-hard stem to root)
-u can fit the clones inside a propagator box and control humidity easier
 
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