Saturday, January 11, 2014

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All the gardening books are adamant Chrysanthemum cuttings

All the gardening books are adamant,Chrysanthemum cuttings ..?
All the gardening books are adamant - Chrysanthemums will do better if you start afresh with new cuttings each year than if you just let the old plants sprout again.

Ive always been very obedient. Over the winter the old plants die down, but by spring, shoots are - well, shooting up from the base. And I always pull them off to use them as cuttings.

This isnt intended to be a how-to post, but just in case anyone is interested, its dead easy. You need shoots at least two inches long. Pull them off gently, then cut the stem straight across just below a leaf node. Again gently, pinch off the lower leaves, leaving just a couple at the top. Pop them into some damp potting compost and - well, just wait. They may look a bit floppy at first, but one day (a month or so later) youll suddenly notice that theyve perked up - and youll know theyve rooted.


All the gardening books are adamant,Chrysanthemum cuttings ..?
There are variations on a theme of course. You could try dipping them in hormone rooting powder before planting them. But I never have, (I cant get the stuff locally)and four out of five have always made it - just plant more than you need. Or you can cover them in a propagator - but Im getting ahead of my story.

Weve had an exceptionally cold winter. Lots of my plants havent made it and, for the first time, that includes my chrysanthemums. Last autumn I had five plants in this container, all taken from cuttings the previous spring ...

All the gardening books are adamant,Chrysanthemum cuttings ..?
... by this spring only two had survived, and another plant (top photo) was looking extremely sorry for itself.

All the gardening books are adamant,Chrysanthemum cuttings ..?
Now, by rights, I should have stripped all three plants of their new shoots and potted them all up to create new plants. But the bad weather has meant putting it off, and off, and off. Up to ten days ago, night-time temperatures were still below zero - not the best time to take cuttings.

Im one of those people who, though having enormous respect for the experience of experts, does like to see things for myself. Its not that I dont believe them - I just want to try it out. So I thought that this year I might try an experiment. For the large white variety which was half dead, Ive salvaged two cuttings and thrown the mother plant away. But for the little yellow variety, Ive mainly left them as they are, only taking enough cuttings to fill the gaps left by the ones that died this winter. Three cuttings have gone into the spaces around the two survivors and Ive got a couple more in pots in case those three dont make it. Will the gardening books be right ? In the autumn well see which are producing the best blooms - the old plants or the new cuttings.


All the gardening books are adamant,Chrysanthemum cuttings ..?
Im giving the cuttings a bit more help than usual this year though - by covering them to create a more humid, and warmer atmosphere. Ive never bothered before, but with the long, cold winter having delayed everything, I reckon they need all the help they can get. The DIY "propagators" are just cut-off mineral water bottle bottoms. They can either be pushed into the soil around the plant (if its already in its growing position), or fitted over small pots.


All the gardening books are adamant,Chrysanthemum cuttings ..?

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