Perfect timing on this video. I’ve been spying this beautiful white dogwood tree on my neighbors property and wanted to do some selective trimming on it. You know, just to help them out. I was just thinking of going through your old videos to find one where you did this and first thing this morning there it was. Thank you. You are truly a master. All the best. Chuck
Thanks for posting the video. There is an abandoned house down the street with a nice dogwood (white blossoms), and I walk past it ever day. I'm going to give this a shot. I don't have anything to lose.
The roots still look alive. I would keep them potted up until they died too. Maybe a miracle could happen and they shoot at the tip of the stem. Worth giving it a try.
Thank you for sharing! I actually found your video on a google search specifically for growing dogwoods from cuttings. I'm a new homeowner and I've been experimenting with gardening and such. Last year, after the leaves had fallen off of my single dogwood, I went out and collected several berries, took everything off of the seeds, and stuck them in the fridge until spring. I planted them, and out of about 20 seeds I had 2 sprout. After watching your video, I think my problem was having my plastic nursery container too exposed to the sun-definitely gonna fix that this next year. Out of my two sprouts this year, one is stunted with tiny curly leaves-not sure what happened with it. The other one, treated exactly the same way, is just going nuts-it's such a happy little tree! I'm planning on keeping it in a container on the porch through next year and then moving it into the ground. Maybe by then it'll have enough hardwood bits to protect it from the hungry local wildlife. Meanwhile, I'm going to check my big tree to see if there's any softwood growths still out there like in your video and give cuttings a try. I love dogwoods and I'm hoping to cover my yard with them and other flowering trees eventually.
Thank you so much. Someone I knew just passed away and she had a pink dogwood tree in her front yard that I love.once the flowers all fall off I am gonna try this.
For your mice problem, I would suggest using nettings or tulles. Get a bunch and surround your tray with nettings. It's really hard to walk on them without getting your feet/paws all tangled up. It might be worth trying. I am using this method this summer.
Thanks you for sharing, Mike. I just bought a few pink dogwoods, I really love these. I plan on trying this in June when the stem is thicker. Have you used a “Walk the Plank” mouse trap? They are fantastic! They work so well, I caught over 20 mice in one summer and my shed is mouse free. Another one, peppermint oil really rocks! Totally keeps ‘em out. Small amounts of cayenne pepper keep the squirrels and rabbits from ruining my other plants, I’ve heard it works for mice. About the cats, please consider that outdoor cats are responsible for the decimation of many song bird and endemic animal populations and we need to be careful to keep them on our property so that they don’t harm wildlife. There is a video on RUclips that shows how bad this problem is on Kangaroo Island, Australia, I recommend checking it out. I really love birds so I would appreciate you make sure your cats don’t eat the wild birds, amigo. Thank you. We have been having to remove them from my neighborhood here in Baldwin Illinois because I live next to a precious marsh ecosystem and they go into this riparian zone to hunt at night. We removed 7 cats in just a couple months. It has been said, “learning from failures can lead to our greatest victories.” May God bless you to be a better worker of the soil more and more. Amen Keep up the good work, sir.
First of all, thank you for the donation to the channel! That's very kind of you. Second, I appreciate your point of view and carefully consider the environment before making big decisions. Just so you are aware, we had all the cats fixed so that they can't breed. We lock them up in a cat house every night so that they are safe and also not out hunting. They are actually very domesticated and family cats that get to roam outside on the property all day. Best of both worlds.
Thank you for this Mike. Chipmunks ate all my seedlings this spring. I was so excited going into year two with my Japanese maples. 24 to be exact. None made it after being eaten. Went to Armenia in 2019 and brought back an apricot seed. Planted it in 2020 and it grew to a beautiful size. They ate that too. And I even took kousa dogwood seeds last November. They all sprouted this spring after stratification and planting, and even those were eaten. Apparently my mesh barrier didn’t keep them away. I though I was alone with the bad luck but this video helps. I don’t want to give up, but nothing is worse than waiting years and failing brutally. I guess we fail, learn, and try again.
Thank you so much for this. I have a monster tree in my greenhouse that even though I pruned it way down it has reached fourteen feet in height in new growth. I will get at least a hundred babies from that tree, I hope, and hopefully get the mother tree transplanted this fall outdoors.
Totally blows my mind. Been in horticulture with my own small nursery and others since 1979. Everyone knows you can't root dogwood trees. Your just what the world needs, someone to say let's see if we can. The shrub ones root so easy, can't wait to try with the kousas. Thanks for the encouragement, I'd never thought do try the exbury azaleas and first try they are doing fine. Sorry about the mice. Always great seeing your rhododendrons.
Thanks for the nice comment! Man, I just clicked on your name just to see what was there. I do that occasionally out of curiosity. I was pleasantly surprised to see a channel that was full of pottery making. I've been interested in that for years but never actually tried it myself. Really cool channel and I look forward to checking out more of your videos.
Yes, interesting indeed. Bruce MacDonald's 1986 Book "Practical Woody Plant Propagation For Nursery Growers" mentions rooting specimen trees like Flowering Dogwoods and Japanese Maples. His take appeared to be that while it was possible, the results were not nearly as reliable and efficient as grafting for a commercial operator. But for a hobbyist, even a low percentage take is fun and exciting. I will give it a shot next summer for sure.
Mike I feel ya re the nice; here it's 🦌 and any darn new start I finally move into the actual ground. Hugely disappearing after months of nurture and care. Appreciate the guidance and the skill, look forward to more content in the future! 👍
Thanks Steven! Yeah, deer are a real problem around hear too. The East coast seems to have more of a problem with them though. They eat anything that's not a rhododendron on my property.
Glad I saw this. I thought I missed my window on Dogwoods this year. Wanted to let them wake up outside or even out them in my tent... Too many other projects. But it's muggy and hot and pouring rain today..only have some cheapo rootfast hormone left...bit gonna try a few cuts today in some failed Copper Beech seedling cups. Yep. Copper Beech is my deciduous choice this year. From am Ancient tree in a local arboretum. You aren't alone w your Dogwood disaster. I collected about 100 Japanese Maple babies of various phenotypes last year. Even uppotted the big ones for winter protection. I lost every single one. May try them in one of my tents for overwintering...and will try it w these dogwoods if they take. Scored two free big Mugo Pines at work the other day...worked my insane Warlockiness on them and gave them miracid and Holly tone and SHADE...oh yah looking awesome. One in a wine box the other in a forever pit. Did u do Metasequoias this year? I'm totally into them. Using the straight ones for bonsai forests and the curly dwarf ones for beautiful accent plants both in pots and in ground. Feel the rush Propagator lol Cheers form Massachusetts. Hope the kids are good. I got unit 1 graduated form college last month.. enjoy them now! Chris
I grew up in the 1950s and walked to school along a sidewalk lined with gorgeous American dogwoods, pink and white. Sadly, many American dogwoods succumbed to a blight during the past 30+ years, and garden centers only carried Kousa dogwoods -- not a very pretty species, imo. Anyway, there are still some traditional American dogwoods extant, and I spied two of them, a white and a spectacular pink (like old pink brick in color, not the gaudy pink of today), outside a store that has been closed since 2019. I took a small branch from each tree, and will follow the excellent directions in this video so I can propagate the two magnificent dogwoods. Wish me luck!
Morning Mike, after watching this video I went and took cuttings from the pink and the white dog woods in the yard that are close to 80 years old and showing it . I hope they live longer . Ok I took 12 cuttings from each and used perlite as my medium . All eventually dried up and died but Two of the pink. They are doing great and still have green supple healthy leaves on them . I’m afraid to bother them and keep raising the pot looking for roots. When I see roots I will transfer to a growing medium and a pot of their own . Two out of twenty four I guess isn’t too bad I guess . I also did 24 flaming bush/ fire bush / euonymus alatus but lost all of them. Time to try again. Love you videos and great knowledge. We have kindred interest.
Thank you for the video on dogwood, I have a deep pink and regular white that 80 to 100 year old, the old but well preserved farm house is 137 years old. I’ve been wondering if I could make cuttings from the dog woods and carry on the old trees for another 100 years. I will be giving this a try until it’s successful thank you .
I would build a hardware-cloth "cage" the size and shape of your plastic dome, set it over the flat, and put a rock on it to keep rodents from flipping it over. I have chipmunks, little red squirrels, mice, and some kind of rats to contend with, so that's what I'll be doing. Also found a HUGE aquarium this spring (FREE!!!) that's going inside my unheated 6x8 greenhouse along with the 20-gallon one I have in it now, and I'll put hardware-cloth or shelf glass over the top (the glass will be vented slightly) to exclude the vermin. Thanks for this video - I've been wanting to propagate dogwood trees - I have two small white flowering dogwoods I can prune from, but LOVE the pinks, and they come in several shades, too. Now I know I can prop them - and dogwood roots SO easily! I have a small collection of rooted red-twig ditch-dogwood cuttings, even one with flowers! Have clippers, will travel!!! (I love Busy Beaver's note below, regarding "selective pruning." I "prune for free" and take all the clippings so as not to leave any mess. I don't take much - only what's in the way, or to make the plant look better. And if the owner would appreciate some rooted cuttings back, I'll always be happy to do that!)
Oh daggum, Brother! That was a kick to the crotch! Thanks for the satisfaction of showing the roots at the end. You know, I’m always curious who you believe you need to prove your shtuff too. Your methods work, it’s pretty obvious. I’d vouch for you. You bring a growth mindset (pun is happy accident, not intended) and a ton of knowledge, and that’s why I’m here. That and to live vicariously in your Zone through your videos, it’s an awesome mental vacation. I appreciate you, brother.
If it happens that you keep on having trouble with mice, I have found a wonderful solution, get some turkeys, I know it sounds crazy but it works. And I love this video, it came at the perfect time. Love you and the family and I know Aly is loving the cats and she will love the turkeys too.
Great video!! Do you think, since it still looks green, they would still grow. I am sure you are familiar with air layering. Do you have any of those videos for dogwood trees. I am very familiar with air layering but have never done it. I am 70 and I have had my dark pink dogwood for 45 years. I would like to start two for my adult children. I love your videos. They really are the best. 🐸
I'm very familiar with air layering, in fact, I created about 7 pink dogwood air layers about 6 years ago from my mother-in-law's tree. Unfortunately, I wasn't really on RUclips that much yet and didn't film it. I'll have to do a video about that.
Great video, Mike. I tried your procedure for a pink flowering tree. Today is August 16 and I see what looks like developing terminal tissue like other white dogwoods in the yard. I assume developing terminal buds for next year, meaning some success. My question is about upcoming care for the fall and winter. I propagated these inside clear plastic storage bins on the north side of the house. The medium is coconut coir. Because I believe there is little nutrition, I wondered if the tress needed any fertilizer. I generally don't fertilize after July 4 so plants don't have a flush of tender growth to get hit by frost in October., It's just I wonder if the coconut coir has enough for them to survive. I plan on keeping them in these bins outdoors over the winter. Thank you.
Thank you for this video! I love dogwood! I'm gonna try this, if I can get someone to gather a couple of branches for me! (I'm housebound) I have wild dogwood in the woods but many have died out from that old fungus, which may end my efforts before I get very far! Anyway, I'm gonna try to save a few to put out in my yard! Maybe I'll live long enough to watch them bloom someday! Wish I still had wild azalea out there! There may be some now! I haven't been able to hike through in almost 20 years! Wish I'd could go look!! For Pink Lady Slippers, little blue water iris, magnolia, all kinds of neat stuff! Man, you got my Spring fever turned up but IDK if I'll be able to do anything about it! 😁
I potted about 9-12 white dogwood cuttings and 12 Yoshino cherry cuttings about a month ago. I put them in 1-quart pots (4 per pot) and covered with a 2 liter soda bottle dome. I left them in a place where they're protected from the sun but still will get rain (underneath a woven fabric patio chair 😂). So far, they're all still green and have all of their leaves. My plan was to wait until around August to separate them if they took, but I might wait until the fall when they go dormant like you did. Fingers crossed!
Hello, I am brand new to all of this, (this is the first video I watched about the dogwoods) would you be able to take cuttings while it still has flowers on them? It is April right now and have been wanting to give this a shot. Thanks in advanced.
Yes, as long as the material is long enough to take a cuttings and it's somewhat hardened off so that it doesn't wilt over as soon as you cut it. It should be new growth, not last year's growth.
Just make sure to get most of the roots. I don't think you'll have a problem this time of year since you have all summer to grow new roots. After digging it up and potting it, place in a shadier location this summer so that it doesn't have to fight the heat and sun all summer while getting established.
Last year l found a "wild" dogwood tree sapling growing in my driveway garden. This is overshadowed by a huge maple tree. It is now about 4-5 feet tall. This year l found 2-3 tiny saplings a few feet away - each about a foot tall. I looked up and found out that NYS does have types of wild dogwoods. Not sure if mine blooms....Can l dig it up to move it? Not sure large enough to take cuttings yet. (PS- Im overjoyed to have it! 😁)
I was so invested in this video… that I forgot you warned me in the beginning that it wasn’t going to be a fairy tale ending. So I got to the end and was so sad after the promising build up. I laughed so hard… only at myself bc this was truly a very informational video and you tried to give the heads up😂
Great information. Thanks a bunch. Something I have been wanting to do for a friend of mine who might need to remove her old, well established trees for fire insurance purposes. Any news on the future protection strategy? Was thinking you could make some 1/4" hardware cloth covers for the trays.
here is something you should try. Last fall I collected a lot of berries from white and red dogwood trees planted them in my garden and most of them came up in the spring, now in September they are doing great and are 3 to 4 inches tall. so I've got about 30 trees doing great. Do you think they should be protected or leave them in the garden and Mulch them good? I'm also going to try kousa dogwood seed this fall.
Dogwood trees are fairly tough and cold hardy. I don't think you'll have a problem leaving them out in the cold but you can give them a little added protection if you're worried about it. You can always store them in an unheated shed or garage through the winter.
I love this video! Explains very well what to do. Although what is the name of the song you use. Shazam is telling its some random song but it’s not it.
I’ve been waiting for this video since you told me a week or so ago that it was coming. Now, I feel confident that I can take some pink Cherokee dogwood tree cuttings from my landlady’s tree tomorrow while it’s cool and raining here in Southern Oregon. What a bummer that a mouse ate all your hard work! I have a question about snowball bush cuttings. Have you done any of those? My landlady also has a beautiful, lush white bush I’d like to take cuttings from.
I can commiserate, although it didn't happen with cuttings, rather with seedlings. Besides the cats, what are you planning to do to keep the mice away? I would love to get some ideas. I had thought about fencing scraps with very small holes (1/4").
I don't want to have to fence off individual projects. So far we've gotten 4 barn cats that are doing a great job catching mice and moles this spring. I've heard moth balls work, so I might use some of them. I will probably put down some mouse poison as well. I'll use a combination of things.
Thanks for your great videos, Mike. I've been propogating hydrangeas since watchig your videos, and they've done great. I'm trying white dogwoods currently, so I hope they'll root. One question for you; in this video you mentioned moving them into a protected area, such as a shed over winter. Do they need lighting during the winter months, or will they survive in a pitch black environment?
They don't need lighting until the buds start to swell and break in the early spring. make sure they've gone fully dormant before putting them in the shed.
Does the pagoda dogwood (Cornus alternifolia) fit into the category to try this method? I have a lovely pagoda that has outgrown its site, and I'm not finding any at local nurseries or online. So I'd like to try to follow your instructions and propagate it. Any comments?
hello Mike! So, after trying various methods of propagating a neighbor's magnificent old White Dogwood tree, I finally succeeded (I think). I just stuck 3" suckers in a pot (with rooting hormone) outside on my sheltered porch (in the Spring) where my Clematis resides. Occasionally throughout Spring and Summer, I would give them a gentle tug. They are now resisting that tug. SO, now it is mid-September. What shall I do next? Thank you!!!!!.
Awesome! Store them in a protected spot, like an unheated garage or shed, or even under a covered porch. Just make sure to keep the medium lightly moist through the winter.
Hello...it's me again! ~ So, are you saying they should not be in a place where they would freeze? Thank you SO MUCH for your reply!!! I want to scoop them out from the very large pot where the Clematis is. I would store them together. You are the best!! 🪴🌱🌼🐞
Great idea to keep some cats around... I’ve learned to stack the deck against mice; field rats etc and keep 2 or more 8 to 16 week kittens on site also.
question, i have some hardwood dogwood cuttings... from 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick... 4 to 7 inch long...no leaves.....planted in a mixture of sand and cactus/ perlite soil....some videos say water and cover with plastic bag to create mini greenhouse and open once a week to let in fresh air... others say no cover and make sure sand doesnt get dry, better to not get mold and kill the roots.... whats is the best way???
Mothballs around the outer perimeter of the hoop house. Keeps mice and rats away, and the snakes who come to feed on the vermin. Cats work too but they tend to dig in the plants (think sandbox). Keeping cats out of the hoop house doesn't diminish a colony of mice or field rats because they have plenty of shelter and food supply inside. What you really need is a pet owl.
I want to graft three together. Same color outside with another inside. Probably purple white purple. Should I do it when I root them? Or root them… skin part of them… and graft it? Or just root them, then plant all three close together… and band them together as they grow???? Any input would be appreciated.
Hi Mike, about a month ago I got 6 cuttings from a neighbor dogwood tree, I put 3 in a plastic box, & 3 just outside on the North side of my greenhouse, I just check, 3 inside the box are still green and has not dropped the tiny leaves I left on the cutting. The box keeps sweeting and I keep looking and so far all is well. I did just like you did I dipped them in hormone powder and planted them. My question is it’s been a month, what do I do with them come fall? Linda Moore
Keep the mice away, lol. Seriously though, you don't have to do much. You could bring them up on a covered porch or put the tote out under a tree for protection. They are very cold hardy.
Hi Mike, just a question for you about making cuttings from Linden trees or I think you guys call them Basswood trees there. I am in NZ ,so opposite seasons to you. I have a bunch of seeds I collected, but can't find any info on starting them from seed. I was wondering if you have ever grown the Linden tree from cuttings and what would be the best time of year to try doing this. Thankyou.
I've never worked with that tree so I don't want to give you bad advice. I always start with hardwood cuttings on trees that I'm unfamiliar with. You could also try air layering it. Good luck Jacqui, and stay warm this winter.
@@MikeKincaid79 Thanks Mike. I will have a go. We are having the oddest weather here. My jonquils are flowering and my daffodils are about 15cm tall, but flowering! Even though its snowing in the South Island, here in the North Island we are having warm sunny days. The plants are getting quite confused. Hopefully you guys will be enjoying a long, hot summer.
What about rooting a sour cherry tree (reddish pink , great cobbler or pie) and. Why not use the cover with vents open and wage the bottom up with pennies or quarter s to cross ventilate.
If this ever happens again, I hope you don't give up on them. Although these probably didn't have buds left, they did have very nice looking white roots. Next time, treat them as if they are normal and keep them watered until they either rot or they grow. I've had plants that were growing inside and died back to the point where they looked dead. Lazy procrastinator that I am, I tend to cut back the dead stuff but leave them with the others to deal with later on. Sometimes things actually come back! You never know -- maybe you'll get a sucker off of the bottom node or something. With all of the stuff you have going on, though, I don't know how you even keep track of it all.
Trust me, I tried. I actually found them like this earlier on in the spring and left them for over a month. While everything else was starting to grow, these were making no headway. I finally decided to call it and finish the video when I was sure that nothing was going to come of them.
@@MikeKincaid79 Ah, OK. I have some little thornless honeylocust "sticks" in pots outside that I left out over the winter. I grew them from seed last year and watered them occasionally after they went dormant. This spring, most of them looked dead and a few are. I snip down from the brown tops, stopping when I see anything that looks green. Some are coming back so I'm crossing my fingers.
Hi Mike, I have Japanese maple cuttings in my green house, I got the cuttings in spring. They produced leaves, but now the leaves are dying. I am making sure to spray water regularly to keep them moist. What is the reason this is happening?
There are a lot of cat organizations that catch (wild) farm cats Spay/neuter them and then adopt them out as mousing cats. You provide them shelter and food, and they keep the mice at bay on your property. Also, I suggest building a few hardware wire protective "domes" over the baby cuttings.
I have chipmunks and squirrels that dig my transplants up all the time and ravage the strawberries and blueberries. Sometimes even take a few bites of a tomato I try to remember they're apart of God's creation too. This is good to know about the Dogwoods my neighbor has lost a few and I have lost one to the Redheaded ash borer. I can propagate from a healthy tree, there is one tree not far from my house that half of the tree blooms white and the other half blooms pink. It must have been grafted a long time ago because the trunk is close to ten inches in diameter.
I do plan to work on that at some point. I actually have one planted out in my landscape. I'm waiting for it to put on some size. I'll eventually do some air layering videos and work on rooting cuttings.
Oh Mike… I know you were so disappointed…. However, you are right…. You proved it was the right way to propagate dogwood trees. 😀 Would this method work with the Chinese type dogwood trees as well you think? I have a variegated one that I would love to propagate
Try some bucket traps. Take a bucket put a little feed in the bottom. Set some boards on the edge of the bucket to the floor of the green house. As it gets cooler and the mice get desperate for food they will end up in the bucket trap. Take em down the road a few miles away and dump them into a field. Take the bucket back home reset it up and empty daily.
Okay, so i understand that I can't get a pink dogwood tree from a seed that was collected from a pink dogwood tree. My question is, can I get a white flowering redbud tree from a seed of a white flowering redbud? I have searched the internet and can't find the information. Thank you for your time!
Seeds are not a good way to get what you're looking for due to genetic variability. I would find a specific plant that you're looking for and either create more through cuttings or air layers. That way, they will be clones of the parent tree or plant and look identical. When you grow seeds, you never know what you're going to get and it takes a lot of time and effort to find out. It's certainly a fun project and can be used for breeding purposes but if you're looking for a specific tree with specific flowers then buy that tree and copy it through asexual propagation methods. Good luck and have fun!
MIce problem I suspect has gotten worse for many of us in these last few years and will increase same with insects for 2024 it would be good to prepare for that. Thanks for the info I love the Dagwood Tree.
Yes, for sure. The mice and insect problem has definitely gotten worse. I attribute it to our warmer weather but on the plus side, the warmer weather is nice.
I have felt the need to ask you a question for a while and when my computer is handy I forget, (one of those challenges with aging). Have you started working on a book on how to propagate plants yet? If not, you should. It won't be long and a publisher is going to be contacting you to do so!
Awe, thanks so much for that. I haven't written a book or started on one because there are so many books out there. I really enjoy doing the videos and showing the proof at the end. Maybe I should consider a book though. Not sure how I'd go about doing that and making it unique or different from the others like I can with the videos but I suppose there's a way.
@@MikeKincaid79 I’ve tried 4 different substrates and incubated to hold moisture in and also without and have 100% loss rate. Using a rooting hormone as well. But the figs I did at the same time is about 80% success. Failing with apples and pear.
@@MikeKincaid79 Awesome looking forward to the video. Ive given up on them. Thinking about trying hydroponic system as one last shot but not sure how that will turn out either.
Wow so sorry to see the damage! However on the other hand I am so excited to be seeing roots again in your videos, flowers in the garden are nice but ROOTS ROOTS ROOTS we can roots. hahahaha
Hardware store, 1/2 inch wired cloth. Bend to make cage, mice can't get in Probably numerous other choices but that is easy and will save the plants so no time lost
Hey Mike, Are there any hybrid Dogwood trees that can tolerate our Cold (5 -15 degrees) with 4-5 feet of snow during our winter months here in north central WA state ? We’d Love to grow a few around our property.
Could you please sell me a green giant young tree? They don’t sell it here in Ontario, Canada. I have been trying to find it but I can’t find this cedar tree here.
For the mice, mak a mix of honey corn bread mix (attractant) & baking soda (gaseous). Put the mixture in a plastic container with a lid. cut a small hole in the end (access). Solution - rodents don't pass gas!!!
Hello mate. I had the same thing over winter growing acorns and hazelnut .. they were all starting to get roots coming out. I was chuffed to bits. Three weeks later the terrorist mice attacked and eat the whole lot. Gotta wait til next year now 🤣😂🤣👍
Perfect timing on this video. I’ve been spying this beautiful white dogwood tree on my neighbors property and wanted to do some selective trimming on it. You know, just to help them out. I was just thinking of going through your old videos to find one where you did this and first thing this morning there it was. Thank you. You are truly a master. All the best. Chuck
Thanks Chuck and good luck with your cuttings.
Thanks for posting the video. There is an abandoned house down the street with a nice dogwood (white blossoms), and I walk past it ever day. I'm going to give this a shot. I don't have anything to lose.
Yep, nothing to lose. Let me know how it goes.
Thanks!
Hey Farm Mom! Thanks for the support! Now lets go get some coffee.
This was the first video of yours I’ve watched and I was devastated by the end lol. Thank you for sharing the failure and the success of the method.
Glad you found the channel. Lots of great content about propagation where I succeed!
The roots still look alive. I would keep them potted up until they died too. Maybe a miracle could happen and they shoot at the tip of the stem. Worth giving it a try.
Thank you for sharing! I actually found your video on a google search specifically for growing dogwoods from cuttings. I'm a new homeowner and I've been experimenting with gardening and such. Last year, after the leaves had fallen off of my single dogwood, I went out and collected several berries, took everything off of the seeds, and stuck them in the fridge until spring. I planted them, and out of about 20 seeds I had 2 sprout. After watching your video, I think my problem was having my plastic nursery container too exposed to the sun-definitely gonna fix that this next year. Out of my two sprouts this year, one is stunted with tiny curly leaves-not sure what happened with it. The other one, treated exactly the same way, is just going nuts-it's such a happy little tree! I'm planning on keeping it in a container on the porch through next year and then moving it into the ground. Maybe by then it'll have enough hardwood bits to protect it from the hungry local wildlife. Meanwhile, I'm going to check my big tree to see if there's any softwood growths still out there like in your video and give cuttings a try. I love dogwoods and I'm hoping to cover my yard with them and other flowering trees eventually.
That’s a very cool idea and a noble goal. That’s how I started out with rhododendrons.
Thank you so much. Someone I knew just passed away and she had a pink dogwood tree in her front yard that I love.once the flowers all fall off I am gonna try this.
You can definitely multiply that tree this spring!
I'm going to try this with the Scarlet Fire we planted over our late dog.
Thanks for sharing.
For your mice problem, I would suggest using nettings or tulles. Get a bunch and surround your tray with nettings. It's really hard to walk on them without getting your feet/paws all tangled up. It might be worth trying. I am using this method this summer.
That's a really neat idea. Thanks Dorothy.
Thanks you for sharing, Mike. I just bought a few pink dogwoods, I really love these. I plan on trying this in June when the stem is thicker.
Have you used a “Walk the Plank” mouse trap? They are fantastic! They work so well, I caught over 20 mice in one summer and my shed is mouse free.
Another one, peppermint oil really rocks! Totally keeps ‘em out. Small amounts of cayenne pepper keep the squirrels and rabbits from ruining my other plants, I’ve heard it works for mice.
About the cats, please consider that outdoor cats are responsible for the decimation of many song bird and endemic animal populations and we need to be careful to keep them on our property so that they don’t harm wildlife. There is a video on RUclips that shows how bad this problem is on Kangaroo Island, Australia, I recommend checking it out. I really love birds so I would appreciate you make sure your cats don’t eat the wild birds, amigo. Thank you.
We have been having to remove them from my neighborhood here in Baldwin Illinois because I live next to a precious marsh ecosystem and they go into this riparian zone to hunt at night. We removed 7 cats in just a couple months.
It has been said, “learning from failures can lead to our greatest victories.”
May God bless you to be a better worker of the soil more and more. Amen
Keep up the good work, sir.
First of all, thank you for the donation to the channel! That's very kind of you. Second, I appreciate your point of view and carefully consider the environment before making big decisions. Just so you are aware, we had all the cats fixed so that they can't breed. We lock them up in a cat house every night so that they are safe and also not out hunting. They are actually very domesticated and family cats that get to roam outside on the property all day. Best of both worlds.
Lovely of pink and white dogwood, to good to keep them over the winter, Now getting beautiful blossoms of them!
You're wonderful planter !!😁😁👋👋🌺🌿
Thank you very much!
@@MikeKincaid79 you re welcome !😁😁
Thank you for this Mike. Chipmunks ate all my seedlings this spring. I was so excited going into year two with my Japanese maples. 24 to be exact. None made it after being eaten. Went to Armenia in 2019 and brought back an apricot seed. Planted it in 2020 and it grew to a beautiful size. They ate that too. And I even took kousa dogwood seeds last November. They all sprouted this spring after stratification and planting, and even those were eaten. Apparently my mesh barrier didn’t keep them away. I though I was alone with the bad luck but this video helps. I don’t want to give up, but nothing is worse than waiting years and failing brutally. I guess we fail, learn, and try again.
That's it man, all you can do it keep moving forward and giving it another shot.
@@MikeKincaid79 Mike Kincaid the Top Gun of cuttings..... edit just heard you say propagating for 16 years! Holy ravioli
Get a cat my friend
can you put cayenne pepper on them? or like spray it all with soap? or some other remedy?
Thank you so much for this. I have a monster tree in my greenhouse that even though I pruned it way down it has reached fourteen feet in height in new growth. I will get at least a hundred babies from that tree, I hope, and hopefully get the mother tree transplanted this fall outdoors.
Good luck, I hope it works out well for you.
Totally blows my mind. Been in horticulture with my own small nursery and others since 1979. Everyone knows you can't root dogwood trees. Your just what the world needs, someone to say let's see if we can. The shrub ones root so easy, can't wait to try with the kousas. Thanks for the encouragement, I'd never thought do try the exbury azaleas and first try they are doing fine. Sorry about the mice. Always great seeing your rhododendrons.
Thanks for the nice comment! Man, I just clicked on your name just to see what was there. I do that occasionally out of curiosity. I was pleasantly surprised to see a channel that was full of pottery making. I've been interested in that for years but never actually tried it myself. Really cool channel and I look forward to checking out more of your videos.
Yes, interesting indeed. Bruce MacDonald's 1986 Book "Practical Woody Plant Propagation For Nursery Growers" mentions rooting specimen trees like Flowering Dogwoods and Japanese Maples. His take appeared to be that while it was possible, the results were not nearly as reliable and efficient as grafting for a commercial operator. But for a hobbyist, even a low percentage take is fun and exciting. I will give it a shot next summer for sure.
Mike I feel ya re the nice; here it's 🦌 and any darn new start I finally move into the actual ground. Hugely disappearing after months of nurture and care.
Appreciate the guidance and the skill, look forward to more content in the future! 👍
Thanks Steven! Yeah, deer are a real problem around hear too. The East coast seems to have more of a problem with them though. They eat anything that's not a rhododendron on my property.
Glad I saw this. I thought I missed my window on Dogwoods this year. Wanted to let them wake up outside or even out them in my tent... Too many other projects.
But it's muggy and hot and pouring rain today..only have some cheapo rootfast hormone left...bit gonna try a few cuts today in some failed Copper Beech seedling cups.
Yep. Copper Beech is my deciduous choice this year. From am Ancient tree in a local arboretum.
You aren't alone w your Dogwood disaster.
I collected about 100 Japanese Maple babies of various phenotypes last year. Even uppotted the big ones for winter protection. I lost every single one. May try them in one of my tents for overwintering...and will try it w these dogwoods if they take.
Scored two free big Mugo Pines at work the other day...worked my insane Warlockiness on them and gave them miracid and Holly tone and SHADE...oh yah looking awesome. One in a wine box the other in a forever pit.
Did u do Metasequoias this year? I'm totally into them. Using the straight ones for bonsai forests and the curly dwarf ones for beautiful accent plants both in pots and in ground.
Feel the rush Propagator lol
Cheers form Massachusetts. Hope the kids are good. I got unit 1 graduated form college last month.. enjoy them now!
Chris
That last line got me. Doing my best to soak up the time while I can.
I grew up in the 1950s and walked to school along a sidewalk lined with gorgeous American dogwoods, pink and white. Sadly, many American dogwoods succumbed to a blight during the past 30+ years, and garden centers only carried Kousa dogwoods -- not a very pretty species, imo. Anyway, there are still some traditional American dogwoods extant, and I spied two of them, a white and a spectacular pink (like old pink brick in color, not the gaudy pink of today), outside a store that has been closed since 2019. I took a small branch from each tree, and will follow the excellent directions in this video so I can propagate the two magnificent dogwoods. Wish me luck!
Good luck!
Morning Mike, after watching this video I went and took cuttings from the pink and the white dog woods in the yard that are close to 80 years old and showing it . I hope they live longer . Ok I took 12 cuttings from each and used perlite as my medium . All eventually dried up and died but Two of the pink. They are doing great and still have green supple healthy leaves on them . I’m afraid to bother them and keep raising the pot looking for roots. When I see roots I will transfer to a growing medium and a pot of their own . Two out of twenty four I guess isn’t too bad I guess . I also did 24 flaming bush/ fire bush / euonymus alatus but lost all of them. Time to try again. Love you videos and great knowledge. We have kindred interest.
Thank you for the video on dogwood, I have a deep pink and regular white that 80 to 100 year old, the old but well preserved farm house is 137 years old. I’ve been wondering if I could make cuttings from the dog woods and carry on the old trees for another 100 years. I will be giving this a try until it’s successful thank you .
So glad this info will be put to good use. I'm cheering you on. Let me know how it works out.
I would build a hardware-cloth "cage" the size and shape of your plastic dome, set it over the flat, and put a rock on it to keep rodents from flipping it over. I have chipmunks, little red squirrels, mice, and some kind of rats to contend with, so that's what I'll be doing. Also found a HUGE aquarium this spring (FREE!!!) that's going inside my unheated 6x8 greenhouse along with the 20-gallon one I have in it now, and I'll put hardware-cloth or shelf glass over the top (the glass will be vented slightly) to exclude the vermin. Thanks for this video - I've been wanting to propagate dogwood trees - I have two small white flowering dogwoods I can prune from, but LOVE the pinks, and they come in several shades, too. Now I know I can prop them - and dogwood roots SO easily! I have a small collection of rooted red-twig ditch-dogwood cuttings, even one with flowers! Have clippers, will travel!!! (I love Busy Beaver's note below, regarding "selective pruning." I "prune for free" and take all the clippings so as not to leave any mess. I don't take much - only what's in the way, or to make the plant look better. And if the owner would appreciate some rooted cuttings back, I'll always be happy to do that!)
The pinks are so nice if you can get some cuttings of them. Good luck on your project!
Thank you for sharing your experience
My pleasure!
Awesome video 👍👏👌🌱
Oh daggum, Brother! That was a kick to the crotch! Thanks for the satisfaction of showing the roots at the end.
You know, I’m always curious who you believe you need to prove your shtuff too. Your methods work, it’s pretty obvious. I’d vouch for you. You bring a growth mindset (pun is happy accident, not intended) and a ton of knowledge, and that’s why I’m here.
That and to live vicariously in your Zone through your videos, it’s an awesome mental vacation. I appreciate you, brother.
Well thanks so much for the support and I'm glad the videos can take you on a mental vacation from time to time.
you still the man little bro.
Your videos are so useful, thanks!
Glad you think so!
If it happens that you keep on having trouble with mice, I have found a wonderful solution, get some turkeys, I know it sounds crazy but it works. And I love this video, it came at the perfect time. Love you and the family and I know Aly is loving the cats and she will love the turkeys too.
Oh my gosh, the girls are in love with the cats!
Great video!! Do you think, since it still looks green, they would still grow. I am sure you are familiar with air layering. Do you have any of those videos for dogwood trees. I am very familiar with air layering but have never done it. I am 70 and I have had my dark pink dogwood for 45 years. I would like to start two for my adult children. I love your videos. They really are the best. 🐸
I'm very familiar with air layering, in fact, I created about 7 pink dogwood air layers about 6 years ago from my mother-in-law's tree. Unfortunately, I wasn't really on RUclips that much yet and didn't film it. I'll have to do a video about that.
I’ve come across a Kousa dogwood tree and the fruit is magnificent. I’ll be getting some seeds and see if they will let me take some cuttings
Good luck!
Great video, Mike. I tried your procedure for a pink flowering tree. Today is August 16 and I see what looks like developing terminal tissue like other white dogwoods in the yard. I assume developing terminal buds for next year, meaning some success. My question is about upcoming care for the fall and winter. I propagated these inside clear plastic storage bins on the north side of the house. The medium is coconut coir. Because I believe there is little nutrition, I wondered if the tress needed any fertilizer. I generally don't fertilize after July 4 so plants don't have a flush of tender growth to get hit by frost in October., It's just I wonder if the coconut coir has enough for them to survive. I plan on keeping them in these bins outdoors over the winter. Thank you.
Thank you for this video! I love dogwood! I'm gonna try this, if I can get someone to gather a couple of branches for me! (I'm housebound) I have wild dogwood in the woods but many have died out from that old fungus, which may end my efforts before I get very far! Anyway, I'm gonna try to save a few to put out in my yard! Maybe I'll live long enough to watch them bloom someday! Wish I still had wild azalea out there! There may be some now! I haven't been able to hike through in almost 20 years! Wish I'd could go look!! For Pink Lady Slippers, little blue water iris, magnolia, all kinds of neat stuff! Man, you got my Spring fever turned up but IDK if I'll be able to do anything about it! 😁
I potted about 9-12 white dogwood cuttings and 12 Yoshino cherry cuttings about a month ago. I put them in 1-quart pots (4 per pot) and covered with a 2 liter soda bottle dome. I left them in a place where they're protected from the sun but still will get rain (underneath a woven fabric patio chair 😂). So far, they're all still green and have all of their leaves. My plan was to wait until around August to separate them if they took, but I might wait until the fall when they go dormant like you did. Fingers crossed!
Good luck!
Update please?
Can you propagate them in water?
Hai I'm from Indonesia..Thank you for information
Welcome!
.Great video ! 🌿😊🌿 Plants are the best, specially the people behind them 🌿🤩🌿 You got a new sub from Denmark 🌿😊🇩🇰😊.
Hey, thanks so much!
I love your videos! I would love to see one about crabapple trees.
Noted!
Put a wire mesh cage over the top of the cuttings
Hello, I am brand new to all of this, (this is the first video I watched about the dogwoods) would you be able to take cuttings while it still has flowers on them? It is April right now and have been wanting to give this a shot. Thanks in advanced.
Yes, as long as the material is long enough to take a cuttings and it's somewhat hardened off so that it doesn't wilt over as soon as you cut it. It should be new growth, not last year's growth.
Any suggestions on digging up a small Dogwood in the woods? It is about 3' tall, single trunk. Dig Spring or fall? Any suggestions?
Just make sure to get most of the roots. I don't think you'll have a problem this time of year since you have all summer to grow new roots. After digging it up and potting it, place in a shadier location this summer so that it doesn't have to fight the heat and sun all summer while getting established.
Last year l found a "wild" dogwood tree sapling growing in my driveway garden. This is overshadowed by a huge maple tree. It is now about 4-5 feet tall.
This year l found 2-3 tiny saplings a few feet away - each about a foot tall.
I looked up and found out that NYS does have types of wild dogwoods. Not sure if mine blooms....Can l dig it up to move it? Not sure large enough to take cuttings yet.
(PS- Im overjoyed to have it! 😁)
Yes, dig that tree up......as long as it's legal, lol
I just took saplings and put in water..
They are growing leaves etc..
I was so invested in this video… that I forgot you warned me in the beginning that it wasn’t going to be a fairy tale ending. So I got to the end and was so sad after the promising build up. I laughed so hard… only at myself bc this was truly a very informational video and you tried to give the heads up😂
lol 😂. The technique is great. The mice suck 😆
Graft more dogwood cuttings on to your rooted ones Mike.
Hadn't thought of that. It would be some small work, that's for sure, lol.
Great information. Thanks a bunch. Something I have been wanting to do for a friend of mine who might need to remove her old, well established trees for fire insurance purposes.
Any news on the future protection strategy?
Was thinking you could make some 1/4" hardware cloth covers for the trays.
That’s the answer. Hardware cloth is the solver of this problem.
@@MikeKincaid79 Good deal. Best of luck. Will be keeping an eye on your channel.
Can I use Orchid Bark to propagate rose cuttings?
here is something you should try. Last fall I collected a lot of berries from white and red dogwood trees planted them in my garden and most of them came up in the spring, now in September they are doing great and are 3 to 4 inches tall. so I've got about 30 trees doing great. Do you think they should be protected or leave them in the garden and Mulch them good? I'm also going to try kousa dogwood seed this fall.
Dogwood trees are fairly tough and cold hardy. I don't think you'll have a problem leaving them out in the cold but you can give them a little added protection if you're worried about it. You can always store them in an unheated shed or garage through the winter.
Maybe leaving on the cover might help in the future??
I love this video! Explains very well what to do. Although what is the name of the song you use. Shazam is telling its some random song but it’s not it.
Soooo... Your saying go to my local plant nurseries at the end of may or early June, with a pair of snips?
I’ve been waiting for this video since you told me a week or so ago that it was coming. Now, I feel confident that I can take some pink Cherokee dogwood tree cuttings from my landlady’s tree tomorrow while it’s cool and raining here in Southern Oregon. What a bummer that a mouse ate all your hard work!
I have a question about snowball bush cuttings. Have you done any of those? My landlady also has a beautiful, lush white bush I’d like to take cuttings from.
Yes, those root very easily as softwood cuttings early in the summer.
Nice! 😊
I can commiserate, although it didn't happen with cuttings, rather with seedlings. Besides the cats, what are you planning to do to keep the mice away? I would love to get some ideas. I had thought about fencing scraps with very small holes (1/4").
I don't want to have to fence off individual projects. So far we've gotten 4 barn cats that are doing a great job catching mice and moles this spring. I've heard moth balls work, so I might use some of them. I will probably put down some mouse poison as well. I'll use a combination of things.
Hey Mike. I am in middle tn, zone 7b. What is the best Rhododendron cultivar that would survive in my area?
Bell house plug in's work to keep mice away and bugs, fleas etc. I have them in my house and barn.
Hi, some mulberry rooting videos are coming this year? 🤔😎
Thanks for your great videos, Mike. I've been propogating hydrangeas since watchig your videos, and they've done great. I'm trying white dogwoods currently, so I hope they'll root. One question for you; in this video you mentioned moving them into a protected area, such as a shed over winter. Do they need lighting during the winter months, or will they survive in a pitch black environment?
They don't need lighting until the buds start to swell and break in the early spring. make sure they've gone fully dormant before putting them in the shed.
Does the pagoda dogwood (Cornus alternifolia) fit into the category to try this method? I have a lovely pagoda that has outgrown its site, and I'm not finding any at local nurseries or online. So I'd like to try to follow your instructions and propagate it. Any comments?
I've never tried to root that exact variety but it is in the same family as the dogwoods I root and I'm 97.979797% sure it will root with this method.
I get white fuzzy mold alot when I grow things from seed or try to propagate. Besides a fan to circulate air, any suggestions?
Mold is usually a sign of too much water and heat with little air circulation.
Do you recommend only trimming around summer?
I’ll bet you could take them as hardwood cuttings too. Although I haven’t tried.
I would make a cover out of 1/4” hardware cloth.
hello Mike! So, after trying various methods of propagating a neighbor's magnificent old White Dogwood tree, I finally succeeded (I think). I just stuck 3" suckers in a pot (with rooting hormone) outside on my sheltered porch (in the Spring) where my Clematis resides. Occasionally throughout Spring and Summer, I would give them a gentle tug. They are now resisting that tug. SO, now it is mid-September. What shall I do next? Thank you!!!!!.
Awesome! Store them in a protected spot, like an unheated garage or shed, or even under a covered porch. Just make sure to keep the medium lightly moist through the winter.
So, are you saying they should not be in a place where they would freeze? Thank you SO MUCH for your reply!!!
@@MikeKincaid79
Hello...it's me again! ~ So, are you saying they should not be in a place where they would freeze? Thank you SO MUCH for your reply!!! I want to scoop them out from the very large pot where the Clematis is. I would store them together. You are the best!!
🪴🌱🌼🐞
Hey Mike love your videos however can you do some videos on citrus trees/cuttings...thanking you in advance !!
Yes, if I can get my hands on a citrus tree.
It’s mid June of 2023. Perfect timing! 😁
Right on! Good luck with your cuttings!
Great idea to keep some cats around... I’ve learned to stack the deck against mice; field rats etc and keep 2 or more 8 to 16 week kittens on site also.
We've recently picked up 4 barn cats so fingers crossed.
love u Bro,
Good morning, this is so helpful. Thank you. What soul mixture do you use for dogwood cuttings please? Thanks again❤
Anything that drains well, holds some moisture, and is inert. Here's a video about it: ruclips.net/video/eLXHy4A4-xk/видео.html
@@MikeKincaid79 Thank you so much 🤗
question, i have some hardwood dogwood cuttings... from 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick... 4 to 7 inch long...no leaves.....planted in a mixture of sand and cactus/ perlite soil....some videos say water and cover with plastic bag to create mini greenhouse and open once a week to let in fresh air... others say no cover and make sure sand doesnt get dry, better to not get mold and kill the roots.... whats is the best way???
I'm not sure there's a best way but I never recommend putting plastic around my hardwood cuttings. It's unnecessary and contributes to rot.
@@MikeKincaid79 ok, thank you for the reply.... ill try it . like the videos
Prevent mice with peppermint plant nearby or moth balls...Every year mice nested in my mower until used moth balls...It worked!
Maybe I need to put some out in the hoop house this winter.
Mothballs around the outer perimeter of the hoop house. Keeps mice and rats away, and the snakes who come to feed on the vermin. Cats work too but they tend to dig in the plants (think sandbox). Keeping cats out of the hoop house doesn't diminish a colony of mice or field rats because they have plenty of shelter and food supply inside. What you really need is a pet owl.
Just planted my first dogwood tree a few days ago..now we wait.
Good luck!
Would Air layering work on a dog would tree?
Yes. I've done it with pink flowering dogwoods and plan to do it again this summer with a white flowering dogwood.
I want to graft three together. Same color outside with another inside. Probably purple white purple. Should I do it when I root them? Or root them… skin part of them… and graft it? Or just root them, then plant all three close together… and band them together as they grow???? Any input would be appreciated.
That’s the beauty of plants. There are so many fun things you can experiment with them. All your ideas will probably work. You just have to pick one.
@@MikeKincaid79 wow! Thanks!
Hi Mike, about a month ago I got 6 cuttings from a neighbor dogwood tree, I put 3 in a plastic box, & 3 just outside on the North side of my greenhouse, I just check, 3 inside the box are still green and has not dropped the tiny leaves I left on the cutting. The box keeps sweeting and I keep looking and so far all is well. I did just like you did I dipped them in hormone powder and planted them. My question is it’s been a month, what do I do with them come fall? Linda Moore
That is sweating
Keep the mice away, lol. Seriously though, you don't have to do much. You could bring them up on a covered porch or put the tote out under a tree for protection. They are very cold hardy.
Hi Mike, just a question for you about making cuttings from Linden trees or I think you guys call them Basswood trees there. I am in NZ ,so opposite seasons to you. I have a bunch of seeds I collected, but can't find any info on starting them from seed. I was wondering if you have ever grown the Linden tree from cuttings and what would be the best time of year to try doing this. Thankyou.
I've never worked with that tree so I don't want to give you bad advice. I always start with hardwood cuttings on trees that I'm unfamiliar with. You could also try air layering it. Good luck Jacqui, and stay warm this winter.
@@MikeKincaid79 Thanks Mike. I will have a go. We are having the oddest weather here. My jonquils are flowering and my daffodils are about 15cm tall, but flowering! Even though its snowing in the South Island, here in the North Island we are having warm sunny days. The plants are getting quite confused. Hopefully you guys will be enjoying a long, hot summer.
do you spray them at all over the winter?
No, just make sure the medium is lightly damp and doesn't dry out.
@@MikeKincaid79 thanks
Oh dear! You may need a cage for your cuttings. But how long did it take for those cuttings to root? 3 months?
They were rooted by the end of summer so yeah, about 3 months.
What about rooting a sour cherry tree (reddish pink , great cobbler or pie) and. Why not use the cover with vents open and wage the bottom up with pennies or quarter s to cross ventilate.
You can do that once they're rooted but in the beginning, you want the humidity levels high.
If this ever happens again, I hope you don't give up on them. Although these probably didn't have buds left, they did have very nice looking white roots. Next time, treat them as if they are normal and keep them watered until they either rot or they grow. I've had plants that were growing inside and died back to the point where they looked dead. Lazy procrastinator that I am, I tend to cut back the dead stuff but leave them with the others to deal with later on. Sometimes things actually come back! You never know -- maybe you'll get a sucker off of the bottom node or something.
With all of the stuff you have going on, though, I don't know how you even keep track of it all.
Trust me, I tried. I actually found them like this earlier on in the spring and left them for over a month. While everything else was starting to grow, these were making no headway. I finally decided to call it and finish the video when I was sure that nothing was going to come of them.
@@MikeKincaid79 Ah, OK. I have some little thornless honeylocust "sticks" in pots outside that I left out over the winter. I grew them from seed last year and watered them occasionally after they went dormant. This spring, most of them looked dead and a few are. I snip down from the brown tops, stopping when I see anything that looks green. Some are coming back so I'm crossing my fingers.
Will cutting be ok in a baggy with a little water for a day? Not just dogwood.
Yes, that's how I transport my cuttings. Keep out of direct sun.
What type of dirt are you using?
Here's a video about it: ruclips.net/video/RSPLOLNXTD4/видео.html
Hi Mike, I have Japanese maple cuttings in my green house, I got the cuttings in spring. They produced leaves, but now the leaves are dying. I am making sure to spray water regularly to keep them moist. What is the reason this is happening?
Hard to say without understanding more about your setup.
May I suggest hardware cloth cages
You may
@@MikeKincaid79 😁
Do you wait for the dogwoods to completely stop flowering before you take cuttings?
Yes. Mine are just starting to lose their flowers now and it will be another couple weeks before I take cuttings.
@@MikeKincaid79 tempting to do it now even though there are flowers still on some, I guess I'll wait!
Looking pretty close here!!
There are a lot of cat organizations that catch (wild) farm cats Spay/neuter them and then adopt them out as mousing cats. You provide them shelter and food, and they keep the mice at bay on your property. Also, I suggest building a few hardware wire protective "domes" over the baby cuttings.
We've picked up 4 cats and so far it's working out well. We'll see what happens over the next couple years.
I have chipmunks and squirrels that dig my transplants up all the time and ravage the strawberries and blueberries. Sometimes even take a few bites of a tomato I try to remember they're apart of God's creation too. This is good to know about the Dogwoods my neighbor has lost a few and I have lost one to the Redheaded ash borer. I can propagate from a healthy tree, there is one tree not far from my house that half of the tree blooms white and the other half blooms pink. It must have been grafted a long time ago because the trunk is close to ten inches in diameter.
Can we get a video on propagating magnolias? Specifically magnolia macrophylla the big leaf magnolia
I do plan to work on that at some point. I actually have one planted out in my landscape. I'm waiting for it to put on some size. I'll eventually do some air layering videos and work on rooting cuttings.
@@MikeKincaid79 thanks Mike it would be much appreciated 👍
Oh Mike… I know you were so disappointed…. However, you are right…. You proved it was the right way to propagate dogwood trees. 😀
Would this method work with the Chinese type dogwood trees as well you think? I have a variegated one that I would love to propagate
Yes, it should work well for all of them.
Try some bucket traps. Take a bucket put a little feed in the bottom. Set some boards on the edge of the bucket to the floor of the green house. As it gets cooler and the mice get desperate for food they will end up in the bucket trap. Take em down the road a few miles away and dump them into a field. Take the bucket back home reset it up and empty daily.
Okay, so i understand that I can't get a pink dogwood tree from a seed that was collected from a pink dogwood tree. My question is, can I get a white flowering redbud tree from a seed of a white flowering redbud? I have searched the internet and can't find the information. Thank you for your time!
Seeds are not a good way to get what you're looking for due to genetic variability. I would find a specific plant that you're looking for and either create more through cuttings or air layers. That way, they will be clones of the parent tree or plant and look identical. When you grow seeds, you never know what you're going to get and it takes a lot of time and effort to find out. It's certainly a fun project and can be used for breeding purposes but if you're looking for a specific tree with specific flowers then buy that tree and copy it through asexual propagation methods. Good luck and have fun!
MIce problem I suspect has gotten worse for many of us in these last few years and will increase same with insects for 2024 it would be good to prepare for that. Thanks for the info I love the Dagwood Tree.
Yes, for sure. The mice and insect problem has definitely gotten worse. I attribute it to our warmer weather but on the plus side, the warmer weather is nice.
I have felt the need to ask you a question for a while and when my computer is handy I forget, (one of those challenges with aging). Have you started working on a book on how to propagate plants yet? If not, you should. It won't be long and a publisher is going to be contacting you to do so!
Awe, thanks so much for that. I haven't written a book or started on one because there are so many books out there. I really enjoy doing the videos and showing the proof at the end. Maybe I should consider a book though. Not sure how I'd go about doing that and making it unique or different from the others like I can with the videos but I suppose there's a way.
@@MikeKincaid79 There is always a way! I am serious about a publisher contacting you. I have seen it happen with several other channels.
I’m going to give this a try on a dogwood AND a Dawn redwood. Maybe I’ll put an alarm system and some bear traps out for the mice. 😆
Hahahaha
Can you do one on apple trees from
Cuttings. I can’t seem to have any success.
I've never tried it but I can give it a shot.
@@MikeKincaid79 I’ve tried 4 different substrates and incubated to hold moisture in and also without and have 100% loss rate. Using a rooting hormone as well. But the figs I did at the same time is about 80% success. Failing with apples and pear.
@@MikeKincaid79 Awesome looking forward to the video. Ive given up on them. Thinking about trying hydroponic system as one last shot but not sure how that will turn out either.
Wow so sorry to see the damage! However on the other hand I am so excited to be seeing roots again in your videos, flowers in the garden are nice but ROOTS ROOTS ROOTS we can roots. hahahaha
Haha, glad to give you the roots!
Hardware store, 1/2 inch wired cloth. Bend to make cage, mice can't get in
Probably numerous other choices but that is easy and will save the plants so no time lost
What kind of dogwood is that ? The leaves ate so big. Is it a wild one
Cornus Florida
Do you have access to the Flaming Gorge pacific dogwood variety?
Hey Mike,
Are there any hybrid Dogwood trees that can tolerate our Cold (5 -15 degrees) with 4-5 feet of snow during our winter months here in north central WA state ?
We’d Love to grow a few around our property.
I'd have to research that a little but I'm pretty sure dogwoods can take very cold temps into the negative. I know they grow in Wisconsin.
@@MikeKincaid79 thanks Mike. We have a knoll on our property that a dogwood would be perfect
Could you please sell me a green giant young tree? They don’t sell it here in Ontario, Canada. I have been trying to find it but I can’t find this cedar tree here.
Jiffy cornmeal mix and bake soda. 4 teaspoons each. Place around area where mice are. They eat and cannot digest. They die
Someone else just shared a video about that. I never knew that trick but will have to try it.
Try making a screen cover. Screen door screen metal not fabric. Better luck next time Mike
For the mice, mak a mix of honey corn bread mix (attractant) & baking soda (gaseous). Put the mixture in a plastic container with a lid. cut a small hole in the end (access). Solution - rodents don't pass gas!!!
Is that flowering tree
Yes
Hello mate. I had the same thing over winter growing acorns and hazelnut .. they were all starting to get roots coming out. I was chuffed to bits. Three weeks later the terrorist mice attacked and eat the whole lot. Gotta wait til next year now 🤣😂🤣👍
It's a dang shame man, lol.
But if the roots are alive, the leaves should be coming once you protect them, isn't it?
Yes