Great video, I am so happy to have found your channel! So much useful information and you have a really great voice and easy way of explaining things. Please make more!! 😊
Great tutorial! Another trick or hack is to take a length of rain gutter and lay the cane down into it, cover the cane but not the leaves with your mix and keep it watered. Come back and check the rooting a month from now and then snip the cane between all of the root nodes and replant them into pots. happy Gardening!
I have a blackberry bush cane and I've recently propagated two I believe but I'm blind and I feel some of the leaves that are grown from one of the branches underground which is pretty cool but they're drying out I don't know I don't know what to do I've been watering it or spraying it daily the other one I layered a cane inside of a completely 7 gallon container it was probably about 16 inches long cane and it seems to be growing but should I bring it out in the sun or should I leave it in the garage @@TheFruitGrove
I bought a couple of berry bushes this past spring and planted them of course. Been buying blackberries at store so I figured I could grow them. I also discovered wild black raspberry bushes in the wooded area behind my house....wondering if I can take cuttings from them and grow as you did here? Just a thought.
Great video!! So well done. In Tennessee, once I take cuttings and bury them in pots in the Fall, should I leave them outside in those pots during the winter? We can have single digits in the winter. Do I need to keep them watered?
I would keep them somewhere cold but that doesn't freeze, like a shed or unheated garage. The idea is to avoid the soil freezing and damaging the roots or the cuttings. Keep them moist but not soggy - avoid drying out completely.
Spring/summer is best for tip layering (while the plant is actively growing). But fall/winter is better for propagating from cuttings when they’re dormant. And hello!
I researched plant patents found a law firm in Ohio the defends intellectual rights specifically plant patents. I found that plant patents are issued for a non renewable period of 20 years. Navaho was patented in 1989.
_the right to exclude others from asexually _*_reproducing_*_ the plant and from _*_using,_*_ offering for sale, or selling the plant so reproduced_ It doesn't say: unless it's on your property and you don't sell it.
@@shawnsg I bought two patented plants, one for me and one as a gift to a child, so they have their 50 bucks fee. I`ve noticed that thornless blackberry plants don`t live very many years even if you plant a few dozen of them so I plan to always keep extras I propagate in pots to replace the dying ones.
Successful case of patent infringement requires damages which requires monetary loss by the patent holder which requires intentional propagation and a sale by the infringer for proof of loss (not legal advice) Natural propagation is unavoidable
Excellent 😃🎉
I subscribed to your channel 🙏
Great video, I am so happy to have found your channel! So much useful information and you have a really great voice and easy way of explaining things. Please make more!! 😊
Thank you!
That is very cool I basically laid down a cane about a 16-inch Kane under the dirt and buried it and now I think it's growing but I'm not sure
Nice the plant outsmarted you. And grew by it's self.😅 LoL
Right? Sometimes leaving things alone is the best thing to do.
I had good luck rooting fig and mulberry cuttings in small pots under bushy plants in a shady humid spot in mid summer.
I did the same with figs. I stuck some cuttings in a pot and basically ignored it for a few months. Now I have 5 new fig trees!
Great tutorial! Another trick or hack is to take a length of rain gutter and lay the cane down into it, cover the cane but not the leaves with your mix and keep it watered. Come back and check the rooting a month from now and then snip the cane between all of the root nodes and replant them into pots. happy Gardening!
That's a great idea. I wish I had tons more space for more blackberries because they're so easy to propagate.
I have a blackberry bush cane and I've recently propagated two I believe but I'm blind and I feel some of the leaves that are grown from one of the branches underground which is pretty cool but they're drying out I don't know I don't know what to do I've been watering it or spraying it daily the other one I layered a cane inside of a completely 7 gallon container it was probably about 16 inches long cane and it seems to be growing but should I bring it out in the sun or should I leave it in the garage @@TheFruitGrove
Such an excellent video, well done!
Thanks!
That is very cool
Yay!! Thank you, beginning beginner.
I'm glad it was helpful!
Thanks for the info
New Subscriber here
😎🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Good growing
I bought a couple of berry bushes this past spring and planted them of course. Been buying blackberries at store so I figured I could grow them. I also discovered wild black raspberry bushes in the wooded area behind my house....wondering if I can take cuttings from them and grow as you did here? Just a thought.
Probably! All blackberries and raspberries are super easy to propagate from cuttings.
Thank you for all the information.
You bet!
Widzę Polskę w tym buziu.
Awesome!
I just ordered two Prime Ark Freedom blackberry plants in one gallon pots. This is good news. The wild blackberries here are hit and miss on quality.
I've heard those are good, but I haven't tried them. Good luck!
Great video!! So well done. In Tennessee, once I take cuttings and bury them in pots in the Fall, should I leave them outside in those pots during the winter? We can have single digits in the winter. Do I need to keep them watered?
I would keep them somewhere cold but that doesn't freeze, like a shed or unheated garage. The idea is to avoid the soil freezing and damaging the roots or the cuttings. Keep them moist but not soggy - avoid drying out completely.
I'm in North Texas! When's the best time to actually do propagation? Spring, fall?
Spring/summer is best for tip layering (while the plant is actively growing). But fall/winter is better for propagating from cuttings when they’re dormant. And hello!
I researched plant patents found a law firm in Ohio the defends intellectual rights specifically plant patents.
I found that plant patents are issued for a non renewable period of 20 years. Navaho was patented in 1989.
Thanks for the info...I figure better safe than sorry, but that's good to know.
Actually you can legally propagate anything you want on your property, you just cant sell them.
_the right to exclude others from asexually _*_reproducing_*_ the plant and from _*_using,_*_ offering for sale, or selling the plant so reproduced_
It doesn't say: unless it's on your property and you don't sell it.
I found the same info...I'm not going to risk it.
@@shawnsg I bought two patented plants, one for me and one as a gift to a child, so they have their 50 bucks fee. I`ve noticed that thornless blackberry plants don`t live very many years even if you plant a few dozen of them so I plan to always keep extras I propagate in pots to replace the dying ones.
I am wrong half the time but I believe the Navajo Blackberry patent ran out in 2007.
You’re probably right, but I figure better safe than sorry
Successful case of patent infringement requires damages which requires monetary loss by the patent holder which requires intentional propagation and a sale by the infringer for proof of loss (not legal advice)
Natural propagation is unavoidable