Plant Propagation: The Basics of Cuttings

One of the most interesting and rewarding parts of gardening is making new plants. Whether from seed, cuttings, or division it is exciting to watch new plants grow into your landscape. For me I really enjoy taking cuttings. If you have never done a cutting before you should try it. It’s not difficult if you accept ahead of time that you will have some failures, but you will also have some successes. It all depends on the type of plant from which the cutting was taken. Plants that sucker naturally tend to be easier to reproduce through cuttings than others. Here is some more on the basics of cuttings.

Caryopteris cutting with roots
Rooted Caryopteris Cuttings

Here are some advantages to taking cuttings:

  1. They become established easier and faster than plants from seed.
  2. You are assured of getting the same plant each time. When you plant from seed you may or may not get the same plant from seed. It depends on what plant cross-pollinated with the plant the seeds were taken from.
  3. You can make more plants from cuttings than you can from division. A single branch of a shrub could become 4 or more plants. With divisions you may get several good plants with one operation but then you need to wait until they grow back to make more. Of course some plants take to division better than cuttings.

Basic Procedures for Taking Cuttings

variegated hydrangea cuttings
  1. Have your rooting medium ready. Sand, vermiculite, and peat work well in various mixtures. I mostly use sand but mixing it into a 50/50 mix of sand and peat works too. I will be moving away from peat and moving to coconut fiber in the future for environmental reasons. Some plants will root fine if just stuck into soil (i.e. forsythia, willow) but plants that may be sensitive to disease or tricky to root should be rooted in a sterile rooting mix. Read this post for more information on sand as a rooting medium cleverly titled: Why I Like to Use Sand as a Rooting Medium.
  2. Have clean and sharp pruners (Am. Aff) ready for the cuts. Clean pruners are very important since you can transport diseases to your new cuttings from other plants. You want your cuttings to began life with every possible advantage so clean your tools with a diluted bleach solution.
  3. Take the cuttings. As a general guideline cut with at least three nodes on the stem. This can vary but the nodes are where growth hormones reside and having several nodes may work better for some plants than just one. Depending on the time of year you will probably want to do a different cut. Greenwood cuttings work well in the spring and early summer, semi-ripe cuttings in the mid-to-late summer, and hardwood cuttings in the fall or winter. Those are very general guidelines. If you can bring your cuttings indoors almost any of these will work. You will need to protect your cuttings from the elements until they are hardy enough to withstand life in the great outdoors. Some plants will do well with internodal cuttings, which are the cuts you make between the nodes and others will only sprout roots from the node itself. Leave some small leaves on the end if there are any to help the plant to continue to make food for itself. If the leaves are large cut them in half or more to reduce moisture loss.
  4. Apply rooting hormone (Am. Aff) to the cutting. Dip the cutting in a fungicidal solution and sprinkle a little rooting hormone over the base of the cutting. Knock off any extra hormone. Make sure that the cutting has a little hormone all the way up to the nodes.
  5. Stick the cuttings. Place the cutting in your moist rooting medium. Make sure you place the container in a sheltered location with a little indirect light. Keep the cuttings moist but not soggy. The use of a dibber or pencil to make a hole will prevent the rooting hormone from being knocked off the cutting.
  6. Wait. It takes time. Some plants will take as little as a few days or weeks to root while other may take months. Monitor your cuttings as the try to root. As long as it isn’t rotting there is hope. Toss out any rotting or molding cuttings before they contaminate the others then apply a fungicide to help those that remain. When the plants begin to sprout new foliar growth they have probably already rooted. Check the roots and pot them up into a pot with a soilless potting mix and let them grow until they are large enough to be planted in your landscape.

Disclaimer:
These are just general guidelines that I have followed while learning how to propagate plants. I’ve had pretty good success doing things this way but it it may not work for every plant. My advice is to try it and see if it works. You learn something new even in failure!

If you want and excellent source on propagating plants get the book Propagating Plants (Am. Aff.) by Alan Toogood. I have a previous version by the same author called Plant Propagation and it has been a fantastic resource for learning how to propagate plants. It’s very easy to understand and shows specific methods for each plant.

For a list of 10 easy to propagate plants check out this post: 10 Easy to Propagate Plants

Garden tips for before a frost

Garden Tips for Before a Frost

As the first frost approaches, now is the time to take essential steps to protect your garden and set yourself up for success next spring. Below are a few simple garden tips that can help you save money and preserve your favorite plants while extending…

Read More

How to Grow Southern Magnolias from Seed

The other day while on a shopping trip I sat in the car with my daughters while my wife ran into the store for a few things. In front of our parking space was a magnolia. I doubt it was the full sized magnolia (Magnolia…

Read More
hydrangea propagation through cuttings

Hydrangea Propagation (Hydrangea macrophylla)

Every gardener likes a hydrangea in the garden. Likewise every gardener likes having more hydrangeas in the garden! So why not propagate a few more hydrangeas for your garden? Of course you have to have a suitable spot for one but if you have a…

Read More

Garden Shed February Update

It’s been a long while since I’ve mentioned anything about the goings on in my garden shed world. This should take too long, after all it is February, not much is growing, and it’s a small world afterall! Let’s dig right in and look to…

Read More

Discover more from Growing The Home Garden

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

18 thoughts on “Plant Propagation: The Basics of Cuttings”

  1. Thanks for lots of good info on somthing most would like to try if they haven’t done it before. I have not been very successful indoors, but always try and stick prunings in the ground just to see what will take.

    Frances at Faire Garden

  2. Dave,

    I enjoy reading all of your adventures in propagation. You have inspired me to propagate sage, russian sage, mums, verbena, and anything else I want more of in my garden. I have been growing the cuttings under flourescent lights. How long do you think I should leave the lights on per day. I have been leaving the lights on for about 20 hours a day. Too much? Thanks again for your inspiration!

  3. Pamela,

    I'm glad I can help! With your lights you should probably cut back to around 14 hours or so. That will save you some money on your energy bill and won't adversely effect the plants! They need a period of darkness each day to rest.

  4. 14 hours…thanks. Now I just bought another sage plant and a bee balm and will make cutting s from them…I think I am addicted to sage and pretty much all members of the mint family! My pineapple sage cuttings all formed roots longer than 1 inch within 7 days! Now I am addicted to propagation. Is there help out there for me? Do I want help?

    My neighbor gave me 2 hydrangea cuttings and I cut them in half. I put 2 cuttings in water and 2 in potting soil (w/rooting compound). This is fun! I had 2 pieces of stem left over and dusted them with rooting compound and buried them about 1 inch in one of my gardens. Do you think they will root?

  5. My clients hunsbands brother passed from cancer and he bought them a birch tree for their wedding. Recently they moved and now I've been selected to return to the old house, with permission of course, in attempt to get some clippings from the birch and try to propagate a "new" tree in memory of his brother. Any last minute advise or tips for me so this works. It's obviously a semtimental tree and I don't want to hurt the mother tree and need success in getting at least one shoot to produce a new tree. I can't emphasize how important this would be to her husband and therefore, I need to make sure I've got all things covered in my attempt to propagate a new tree for him on her behalf. Thanks in advance for any comments. Jessica

    • Jessica,

      I definitely understand the sentimental value of the tree. A couple tips for you. First off I don't know what zone you're in so I don't know how long you have until frosts but you will want to keep the newly rooted cutting safe from freezing temperatures as long as you can. That might mean growing it in the garage once it's rooted or some other location that will allow it to go dormant without freezing the root system to fast. Keep the cuttings covered with a humidity tent (plastic bag) until rooted. Also take quite a few cuttings if possible. It's possible that you could take 10 cuttings and only get one to root. Get as many as you can! Another option the homeowners may allow you to do is to layer a low hanging branch. It would require a return trip in mid spring of next year in order to collect the rooted branch. Here's a post I wrote on birch cuttings that hopefully will be of some help to you: http://www.growingthehomegarden.com/2009/10/propagating-birch-trees-through.html
      If you have any other questions on it feel free to email me (thehomegarden@gmail.com)

      Good luck and let me know how it goes!

Comments are closed.

Discover more from Growing The Home Garden

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading