@@JimmyBHarvests have you recreated this experiment yet? do you plan to? would be a good one to do again with a larger sample size. i would also love to see the rooting hormone test done again comparing the performers from previous vids plus mixing to see if you get different results. not much done on either, they just recommend with no shown trials. your videos are raw, but well thought out with some decent home trials.
Do you consistently change the water with clean water throughout propagation? Or do you simply leave the same water the whole time? I wonder due to oxygen depletion.
Using small jars, the water that evaporates is pretty substantial. I find I’m adding some fresh water every couple days at the very least, sometimes I do a complete change out.
can you do a comparison where one plant is watered daily and another with liquid fertilizer(made from soaking kitchen waste overnight banana peel, onion peel etc.)
Hi Jimmy, I just loved watching your video on this and never seen it done this way before, so needless to say, i just had to try it! I just finished my own utube video, so come on over to see what i did! I titled the video, First Time Doing This! Thanks again Jimmy
I'm propergating a couple ficus plants, cut at 45 degrees. It's my first time, so I'm watching them intently. I've noticed calluses form on the stems and I'm hoping to finally see some roots on them soon (calluses commonly precede roots on ficus). But I noticed that the stems are also splitting naturally in the water, which made me wonder if a split cut would have helped them to root faster. 🤔 So I started googling and came across your video. Very interested to see how they start rooting, and if the roots start to come out of the splits themselves.
🤔 I’m gonna have to try that split cut on my sage plant. Four years ago I took a cutting, rooted it- grew the cuttings to full size outside, took cuttings in fall, kept them inside over winter and repeat , repeat. So I’m on fourth year from original. I want to take some cuttings now for outside , I’m gonna give that go 👍 Funny thing- sage is a strong survivor. Last fall I took four cuttings and just stuck them in a test beaker if nothing more than perlite with drain holes for the entire winter under a 6500k twist bulb. Those roots were tormented, wet then dry. Dry brown at times. But this spring when I put them in a soil home, you should see them now. Surprised with sages ability to withstand my tormenting 😂 ✌️ great video. Remember the days when people also thought poking their stems with a needle encouraged faster / more root grow too?
I have to try the split method on some stuff. I might try romains from the store. One in water, one in water with cinnamon, and one in water with a split.