Hey, I’m new here and I just want to point out how you wasted ZERO time with this video, no needless chit chat, no awkward moments or tangents, very minimal editing, and you maintained such a coherent flow during all of this that I wondered if you might be a public speaker of some kind. This video was a masterclass of instruction on plant care and maintenance so I commend you!
Thank you so much for this video. I have several cuttings that I rooted in early fall and I'm deciding what to do with them. Now, I feel better about putting them in larger pots. It will give me time to decide whether or not I want them in ground.
Thanks for the great video! RUclips apparently watches my Chrome activity and quickly put this video in my feed. Scary. I live in Zone 9B so shopping for black mulberries like Pakistan. Love your propagation technique!
I live in Indiana, and most of the healthiest wild Mulberry trees in my town are found mostly along the creek side that runs through our town. And I mean right on the side of the creek. Roots definitely contacting waters edge. Large Mulberry trees that Carp hang out and swim under them in the water and eat the Berries as they fall from the tree. So my question is, if they prefer well drained soil, how are these Mulberry trees growing so large, old and healthy while they are semi submerged in wet soil? Some of these trees gotta be pushing 40+ years as I’m almost 50 and they have been fruiting since I was a youngster.
How long does it take for a mulberry tree to produce fruit? I bought one ( about 16” tall and bushy) from a nursery. Also, how long will it take for those little cuttings that you propagated take to produce. How fast do mulberry trees grow?
The tag that came with the tree should read self fruiting or pollinator needed. Different varieties vary as to whether or not pollination is needed. If it hasn’t produced fruit in 2-3 years then perhaps it does.
I thought Mulberry is a weed tree. They pop up on my property from time to time & I cut it close to the ground as I could. They grow back, plus I found a few more plants. I need to move it to the right location so I can enjoy the mulberry.
Hey, I’m new here and I just want to point out how you wasted ZERO time with this video, no needless chit chat, no awkward moments or tangents, very minimal editing, and you maintained such a coherent flow during all of this that I wondered if you might be a public speaker of some kind. This video was a masterclass of instruction on plant care and maintenance so I commend you!
100% agree. Def got a new sub from me for that very reason.
Thank you so much for this video. I have several cuttings that I rooted in early fall and I'm deciding what to do with them. Now, I feel better about putting them in larger pots. It will give me time to decide whether or not I want them in ground.
Glad it was helpful!
Ditto
I’m moving and wanted to take my tree with me but can’t cause it’s gotten to big and now I learned how I can so thank you!!!!
Happy gardening
for deciduous trees, you can dig them out in winter and prune them back to replant somewhere else.
Thanks for the great video! RUclips apparently watches my Chrome activity and quickly put this video in my feed. Scary. I live in Zone 9B so shopping for black mulberries like Pakistan. Love your propagation technique!
Thank you! From Australia. Excellent tutorial.
Glad it was helpful!
wonderful video. How big do your mulberries grow in your pots? Do they give good harvests in pots? Hope you do a follow up video. Thanks!
Keep them pruned unless you want them in ground. Cheers.
I live in Indiana, and most of the healthiest wild Mulberry trees in my town are found mostly along the creek side that runs through our town. And I mean right on the side of the creek. Roots definitely contacting waters edge. Large Mulberry trees that Carp hang out and swim under them in the water and eat the Berries as they fall from the tree. So my question is, if they prefer well drained soil, how are these Mulberry trees growing so large, old and healthy while they are semi submerged in wet soil? Some of these trees gotta be pushing 40+ years as I’m almost 50 and they have been fruiting since I was a youngster.
The information is very helpful...Enjoyed the video.
Glad it was helpful!
Can u teach how and when to prune young mulbery tree also when to prune new branch?
Considering it thanks
Wow thanks for sharing this❤
Thanks for watching
What is the variety that you are working with in this video? Is it a dwarf or regular? ie: Morus Nigra or Morus Ruba?
What a very informative video right from the get go. Thank you
Very welcome
I am glad you told me, I thought they were all self pollinators. Which ones need pollinators?
How close do two non-self pollinating trees need to be?
What zone do you garden in?
7a southeastern us
How long does it take for a mulberry tree to produce fruit? I bought one ( about 16” tall and bushy) from a nursery. Also, how long will it take for those little cuttings that you propagated take to produce. How fast do mulberry trees grow?
Depends on the species ig
Lots of variables such as zone, light, fertilizer applications, etc.
I am wondering if my tree needs a friend in order to fruit. Could I send a photo?
The tag that came with the tree should read self fruiting or pollinator needed. Different varieties vary as to whether or not pollination is needed. If it hasn’t produced fruit in 2-3 years then perhaps it does.
It was a volunteer in my garden. I dug it up and planted it in a large ceramic pot. This is year two for the tree.
What size pot is this plant in
Can I grow mulberry in a giant pot forever or do I have to put it in the ground someday that’s my question
With proper pruning you can. I have bonsai that are 40-50 years old and about 2 feet tall.
I have bonsai that are in pots and 40-50 years old. In nature they would be 20 to 40x larger.
@@ZenGardenOasis. well it’s still fruit
I thought Mulberry is a weed tree. They pop up on my property from time to time & I cut it close to the ground as I could. They grow back, plus I found a few more plants. I need to move it to the right location so I can enjoy the mulberry.