When my Uncle died, a friend of my Aunt asked if he could take a few roses from his grave! Her grandson was angry, but I told the man to take any that he wanted. I just knew. That man propagated roses from those flower, and he brought beautiful rose bushes. He taught her how to tend to them. It was beautiful!
One of my neighbors, a sweet woman, also grew a rose of extraordinary beauty. The woman was elderly, she had died a long time ago ... But I managed to root the once cut rose with her in the summer. From a grown rose, I again rooted a cutting, gave this bush to a friend. And even at the end of November, a cut rose of this variety took root without special conditions! When I see this rose, I always remember Hannelore.
In 1951 when I was born my mother was given a bunch of pink roses. My grandmother managed to take a cutting and establish it. That rambler grew at the back of their house for 18 years and when they retired was transplanted and flourished . In 1986 my mother established a cutting for our house which flourished . Since then I have taken cuttings that have established themselves at my daughters house, our home in France and our new house.. My grandmother obviously picked the best one in the bouquet because it has given rise to at least 10 offspring.
Ive tried a few times without success. I bought a bouquet I fell in love with from a Walmart outlet. It was 2 toned and I just had to try again. I made an egg tea on the window sill and everytime I changed the water I would put a little of that egg tea and a tiny bit of my morning coffee into the cup. Its actually got a tiny shoot coming out the top, and another half way down and another on the bottom down by a tiny root sticking out . Im so happy. I pray it makes it to my garden.
@@conservativetothecor ask your grocery florist if they would save a bouquet that they would normally throw away. Many people are very supportive when trying to keep as much trash from the land fill as possible 😊 even if you’re trying to save the lives of a few flowers! Good luck 💜🙏🏻
Also! So cool you’ve had success! I’m just starting mine from a bouquet the grocery sold me for $1! I recut the stems and put them in water & the little package they provide. They were beautiful for over a week! Never give up on life!😊 I’m inspired to try the egg & tea!
I don't usually leave positive comments on videos because most of them have too much rubbish talk, this one video is what all videos should be like, straight to the point, no bull crap talk
My husband bought me beautiful roses for Mother’s Day this year and I’m currently attempting to propagate them. It would be great if they grow so I could say every year that these were the roses he bought me, alive and well. I don’t have high hopes but it would be wonderful. Thank you for the knowledge to maybe make it work out.
@@YourPalQWERTY Sadly, no. They slowly died off, one by one. It was probably because I left them out in the rain for a week. Will definitely try again next time I get flowers, now that I’ve learned a lot since then.
This is the most detailed video on rose cuttings I've ever seen. And now I'm thinking of all the rose bushes growing in the neighborhood (even wild ones!) I want to grow! They had a - belated - celebration for Mother's day at my kid's kindergarten and gave to each mom, a rose. So I thought to search just in case I could propagate it and keep it. Thanks!
Just attempted to propagate multiple cuttings last night for the second time from a rose that my great grandmother owned... did NOT know where to cut OR that i needed to sterilize my tools. Thankfully, I found your video today so the remaining cuttings will have a chance. I also had never considered rose types may have patents. Excellent video- Thank you SO much!
To repeat the comments below ; Thank you for concise and "jargon free" advice. It's good to know that this video is actually from an expert, so can trust the advice and pointers given. Please keep making them. :)
I agree with the other comments. This video is the best I've watched so many over the years and gave up on propagating a rose bush from cutting due to lack of detail that you provided. Im so excited i cannot wait to have my own rose bushes from my favorite bushes. 🎉🎉🎉
Thankyou your step by step was so helpful I have watched and wasted my time on so many of these Propagating videos that my mind is spinning and most of the time they’re useless you gave me excellent advice and confidence to try this myself I really hope this works I will get back to you if they root, but again thank you so much, your video was very helpful especially for a beginner Gardner
Hi! I'm from the Philippines and I'm gonna try this out since i LOVE roses! I hope I'll be successful... thank you so much.... From all the videos I've binge watched yours is the most informative! new subscriber here! ❤️❤️❤️
Thanks for a really great informative video. My daughter sent me a dozen roses in 4 different beautiful colors for Mother's Day and I hope to follow your instructions so I end up with at least one bush out of it. Thanks again!
Hi,Jason! First roots and shoots from a cutting of the Bouquet Rose are here,with a bit help of Rooting Powder. Many thanks for your videos! Best regards from Vienna 🌹
Have always hated receiving flowers because I have to throw them out at one point or the other. Thankyou for this informational video. Now a good gift can be more than just a fading memory 😃.
Thanks for making this! I got a few roses that I wanted to grow from a store, and even though it seems to be too late now, I’ll actually know what to do next time
Thank you soo much. This video has taught me what happened. A while ago, I had received a beautiful bouquet for a very special occasion and I cut 2 if the stems and and stuck them in a garden pot with another plant and both of them grew. I had no idea how to care for them. Your channel has been very helpful. Both plants have been transplanted to larger pots and are now about 3' tall. I hope to continue to learn about these beautiful plants and keep them healthy.
I have just done 8 cuttings this weekend from 2 different roses fingers crossed I should get about 6 and I'm doing couple cuttings from my blue moon this week
Great video, I subscribed. I have watched your videos time to time, but never about subscribing. Thank you telling and showing how to take good cutting and regrow roses. Right to the point and not all that talking about this and c that over and over again.❤
very good info. I love roses and other flowers, but I am on a very tight budget. My husband said we will eat first before flowers. So what I did I go to Walmart and check their plants sales and those that are wilting and dying which I think I can save it by watering it. I bought petunia last October very cheap 75 cents for 4 inch pot, my husband was kind of upset he said its gonna die and a waste of money I told him it will be ok because the roots are good. Well I am right I planted it takes care of it and now its thriving my husband cannot believe he told me I have a green thumb. I will make a video of it by tomorrow. I will try this video I have one rose bush left I will propagate it. Thanks for sharing.
lol,,,,,,this video is what i looking for, i asked about this propagate technique on your past cutting propagate video. Thank you sir, very very very helpful.
I really appreciate you mentioning the legal rights over some plants and that we should respect that, not many people think about it. I love your videos, very well made! :)
Awsome info. Regarding bouquet roses, I only eve graft them to Dr. Huey to be part of a picking garden. In any other instance I’d prefer own root roses, but I don’t trust the disease resistance of bouquet roses. Roses from bouquets were breed for that (picking, blossom lifespan). But as part of a picking garden, bouquet roses are top notch and many of these varieties can’t easily be obtained any other way than cutting/rooting and grafting from bouquets.
Thanks! Now I’m professional propagating florist in 10 mins! Never thought flowers could be patented or one acquire legal rights. My anxiety, misting, singing to them and hopeful prayers don’t count huh!? 😂
Learned more from your videos than any others, especially highlighting the scam vids of propagating from buds etc! In the UK and trying some bouquet roses. QUESTION: “3-4 weeks to root”, so how many weeks/months till a new plant will be fully established and producing its own flowers? 🤞 Thank you for passing on your knowledge.
I was given a rose from a customer of mine 2 weeks ago and found new growth on the leaf nodes. I’ve never grown roses from seed or propagation but I’d like to try just to see if I can do it! I’ve had great success with propagating other plant varieties so wish me luck!!
Thank you so much for this video!! I am going to try with a clipping from a bouquet rose. I figure it doesn’t hurt to try lol! All of my plants are outgrowing my house and have managed to propagate every one of them. I like a challenge 😂😊
If my bouquet rose already has shoots, and you said roots first...then shoots, can I cut off the shoots in hope that some remaining nodes will developshoots in a non-fertile potting soil? Thank you
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I have a question! one of the stem is growing leaves- about 1/2 inch long. They are very light color. I have them stored in a 2 liter soda bottle, kinda like a mini greenhouse. I used peat pods by the way. Should I start placing it by the window or just use a grow light? Right now I am storing them in the laundry room. No clue what to do now that new leaves are showing.
@@friedapplepie1872 I'd go for the sunlight. At this point, you don't need super high intensity, but enough to get photosynthesis started and keep the stems from yellowing/stretching. Have you checked for roots yet? If they've rooted, you should transition away from the soda bottle to lower the humidity.
Miniatures are among the easiest to root - and a good place to start. Because they have short little sections between leaf sets (internodes) you might choose something with 6 or 7 nodes instead of my typical 3 or 4.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I found a partially dead rose at the cemetery it had just a little bit of green stem on One piece and one tiny little pink bud. I brought it home and dusted the root with a little hormone and replanted it. This was late fall and it is now full of new little stems! It's a miniature rose so I wasn't expecting it to be huge but it is definitely nice and healthy! I did this once before with a little yellow rose. Cemeteries are good places to find poinsettias, mum's and roses that were put out for a specific holiday and never checked on again. I have a gigantic red encore Rose that I rescued at the cemetery where my parents are buried. It had also totally dried out but now I have it big and beautiful about three and a half foot tall and I am going to bring it back and I am going to plant it so that it will survive. I don't live that far away so I can go by and water it until it takes ahold. Over the years I have checked many of the trash barrels at the cemetery and rescued mums also. The tops are usually dry and crunchy and I just break them away and bring home the root if it shows a little green.
I have had no luck with my cuttings but your method seems a little different to others. Will definitely give it a try. I think maybe my issue has been over watering as I get a lot of rot. Going to try the mist.
Hi first thank you for producing great videos. My father planted roses in the family garden some 50-55years ago. A couple of them produce the most amazing fragrance and are around 5 feet high. I tried take cuttings from these but they failed. Now I think I understand why. I wanted the cuttings because when I sell the house I fear that trying to transplant them would kill them which would be awful because as I said they have the most amazing fragrance. Also I can't seem to identify the roses. Again you've produced some great videos thank you.
Hello - I had three cut rose stems which I had hoped to propagate as they were given to me by my Mum from the spray at my Dad’s funeral. (Sorry if this sounds morbid). Two haven’t done anything but one has produced a sprig of leaves - is this likely to be residual energy in the stem, or can it be a sign it may revive? Thank you in advance for any advice you may be able to give me.
Hi Kathryn. You're right that there's stored energy in the stem, and it can use that to send new shoots - the trick is to encourage the cutting to use energy to make roots (first) instead.
Thank you for your quick response! Presumably if the shoot has appeared it may be too late for roots to grow too... I have placed it in compost with rooting powder, but I appreciate the potential may be lost now.
I’m wanting to propagate Saskatoon bushes/trees. Anything different needed for this plant. Thanks for the well explained video. What type of soil should I use?
I haven't tried it by cuttings, but have had great luck from seed - it comes fairly true to the parent type. For cuttings, I'd try semi-hardwood with rooting powder.
Went to the river and scooped up about 16 ounces of sand in a Starbucks cup. Cut some Walmart gift roses and used honey and cinnamon as my rooting hormone. Used a half water bottle as a covering for my cup making a mini greenhouse. A week and a 1/2 later, I have 4 well rooted and leafy lavender rose shoots. The carnations that came with the roses rooted well also.
Can roses be propagated without rooting hormone, and by putting it in water? (I like to really be able to see the roots growing if I can before I plant them.)
Well, I think you saw my video on rooting in water - maybe after you viewed this one. There's probably a good way to make it work, but I found it easier in potting soil. I use quaternary disinfectant (Virkon is the brand) but Lyson will work fine. Bleach, baking soda or vinegar might be okay too, but because their each a little corrosive I like the Lysol better
Thank you so much for this video. Just started my semi-hard rose propagation a little late in the season ( Northern Ca 9b). I have in my bathroom under grow light and on a heating pad. I have a question about the mist vs the wet soil. I have it in a coco coir/perlite medium. also with a bottle over so the greenhouse effect. Listing to your advise, i should not wet the medium after this but lightly mist medium dries out. Am i understanding that correctly. Thank you for any advice.
Hi Connie. Covered yes, and grow light is optional depending on how much ambient light there is in the location. Watering/misting is something you'll need to assess based on how the potting soil is maintaining moisture. On a heating pad you may find that it dries out faster than a light mist will replace. The medium should start at low to medium moisture and your watering/misting is meant to just keep it in that range.
Hi, thank you so much for your ideas. Can you please tell me what kind of rose plant did you take those stems from? I heard that cuttings from English grafted rose do not root. I tried 2-3 times myself, it was unsuccessful. I heard that you have to graft it on a wild rose to get another plant. What should I do?
Wonderful video.. at last, all the best information. I personally believe the open air is so much better, I hate pulling out dead smelly mouldy stems from the pots. Giving them water is rather difficult to judge, you just have to get it right and that’s a bit of a problem since it depends on so many other factors like temperature humidity ventilation. I love roses and my father’s garden is full of some lovely English roses and really wish I could finally get them growing.. The worst problem is mould so in fact should the medium be just a bit damp? should the cutting itself be misted? when would be the right time? Warmish early June? Thanks again
Thanks Kate. I think you're on the right track. Warmish early June would be perfect to start cuttings. The soil should be only slightly moist, and mist the foliage to keep it from wilting off.
Thanks. I use a quaternary disinfectant (the trade name is Virkon). I'm using StimRoot #2 for semi-hardwood cuttings, and it works fairly well. I'll be testing a couple more rooting hormones this year to see if I get an improvement.
Best close-ups of nodes being clipped ever! Thank you so much! My question: I see you planting several stems in one pot. When can you repot them? Is it difficult to separate them? Do you have a video on this? I always wondered why I had such a black thumb... now, watching videos like this, my thumb is getting greener and greener!
Thanks Cynthia. I don't have a video where I separate them, but I'll look for a chance to capture it. No, it's not too hard - just have to take your time and be gentle. It's best done before the plants root firmly together. Best luck!
Jason it's funny you say that because the only 2 times I've been successful in Bud Grafting was taking Buds from a Bunch(Bouquet) of Pink Roses I bought my Wife! I'd actually given up after about 100 failures trying to Bud Graft a HT by the name of 'Riverview' & noticed a new shoot sprouting on a Climbing Rose I used as Stock. Didn't even know until it flowered that it was from the Pink Bouquet & the one under it sprouted shortly after I thought it was from a bunch of Yellow Roses my Kids picked for my Wife on Mother's Day but it was another Pink from the previous Bunch. As Murphy's Law would have it, Cuttings from this very Climbing Rose I've throw into my Tropical Garden have taken Root as do most I take from it & simply stick in the Dirt take Root(but usually die as I provide them zero care/water(I'm talking several months after they've struck & grown, but when I took that cutting from the Bud Grafted Rose to try to grow a new Pink Rose bush for my Wife it failed(Rot). I still have the second one but will try Aerial Grafting to get it to take as it's Hard Wood now(as big as my Thumb!) & if it doesn't take I'll just leave it as a Hybrid as the true Flowers on it are Pink/White variegated(it's just a bit too Tall).
Thank you for this video, will give this a try! Once you water the soil initially and put in the stems thereafter you just mist the top area of the stem correct? Maybe every week depending on weather, I'm in Southern California.
Yes - the soil in the pot should remain fairly moist even without direct watering if you're keeping up on misting. The frequency of misting definitely varies by the environment. If you're keeping the cuttings under a humidity dome or tent, I'd still open and check every day or two.
What are your thoughts on stems that sprout new leaves while they're in the water? Is propagating worth a try if the stems aren't and soft and pithy? The roses began to bottleneck so I tossed them because I thought they were done.
I'm recently very much into gardening. I have cut some roses from a bouquet (just for personal use) and put them in a tiny grow box with no lights. It's placed in a sunny spot. I let it heat up and it has some water on the lid of the box. Is this a good place to grow cuttings? The weather is very unpredictable here, yesterday it was a beautiful sunny day and today it has rained a massive amount. I was afraid that if the cuttings were just outside they would drown
I'm happy to hear you're trying this. I don't do my cuttings covered like this anymore, but it's a decent way to get started. The tricky bit is keeping the right humidity for rooting. Too little, and they dry out. Too much (and with little air movement) and they rot. Look for a minimal amount of condensation on the box, and if you can keep it cracked a bit for fresh air, it may help. Good luck!
Fraser Valley Rose Farm thank you for your reply! It has two ventilation bits but I have kept them closed. I think I will have to try it again with new cuttings and keep one open. They are there for I think about a little two weeks and they haven’t changed one bit. I will keep trying 😄
@@94Sapphira Good for you. One note: you shouldn't see much change in a semi-hardwood cutting in 2 weeks. The most important part is happening in the cells at the base of the cutting. In 3 to 4 weeks, you may see callus or initial rooting, but unless the cutting begins to rot (black or brown usually from below the soil line) there's still a chance.
Hi Jason, do light purple bare root roses take longer to bud out than others? I have a strange coincidence that both of my new light purple bare root roses (one from home depot and 1 from Walmart) are both not showing any signs of budding. I have several others all colors that have already budded out
I can't say I've observed anything specific on the colors, but I do know from experience that some mauve roses are less vigorous than average. Not true for Neptune (2003) though.
Great video !! If you put arose from a bouquet in a vase with water and you start seeing new leaves but no roots, can it grow? Is it too late? After watching your video ,maybe it is.
When my Uncle died, a friend of my Aunt asked if he could take a few roses from his grave! Her grandson was angry, but I told the man to take any that he wanted. I just knew. That man propagated roses from those flower, and he brought beautiful rose bushes. He taught her how to tend to them. It was beautiful!
One of my neighbors, a sweet woman, also grew a rose of extraordinary beauty. The woman was elderly, she had died a long time ago ... But I managed to root the once cut rose with her in the summer. From a grown rose, I again rooted a cutting, gave this bush to a friend. And even at the end of November, a cut rose of this variety took root without special conditions! When I see this rose, I always remember Hannelore.
In 1951 when I was born my mother was given a bunch of pink roses. My grandmother managed to take a cutting and establish it. That rambler grew at the back of their house for 18 years and when they retired was transplanted and flourished . In 1986 my mother established a cutting for our house which flourished . Since then I have taken cuttings that have established themselves at my daughters house, our home in France and our new house.. My grandmother obviously picked the best one in the bouquet because it has given rise to at least 10 offspring.
That's fantastic - what a success!
Wow! That’s amazing! What a lovely heritage
Wow......it's so heart warming....
Oh man, that's a beautiful story. I'm feeling misty-eyed now. Thank you for sharing! 🧡
What a great story! You and this rose are like siblings! 😊
Someone threw a cut rose from a bouquet over my back fence into a compost heap. I now have large pink scented rose rambling through my garden
Now that's a lucky landing!
Adam ur a lucky person
Ive tried a few times without success. I bought a bouquet I fell in love with from a Walmart outlet. It was 2 toned and I just had to try again. I made an egg tea on the window sill and everytime I changed the water I would put a little of that egg tea and a tiny bit of my morning coffee into the cup. Its actually got a tiny shoot coming out the top, and another half way down and another on the bottom down by a tiny root sticking out . Im so happy. I pray it makes it to my garden.
@@conservativetothecor ask your grocery florist if they would save a bouquet that they would normally throw away. Many people are very supportive when trying to keep as much trash from the land fill as possible 😊 even if you’re trying to save the lives of a few flowers! Good luck 💜🙏🏻
Also! So cool you’ve had success! I’m just starting mine from a bouquet the grocery sold me for $1! I recut the stems and put them in water & the little package they provide. They were beautiful for over a week! Never give up on life!😊 I’m inspired to try the egg & tea!
I don't usually leave positive comments on videos because most of them have too much rubbish talk, this one video is what all videos should be like, straight to the point, no bull crap talk
Thanks Freddie
So many rose cutting videos out there and your the only one who tells and shows you where to cut your stems. Great informational video thanks.
My husband bought me beautiful roses for Mother’s Day this year and I’m currently attempting to propagate them. It would be great if they grow so I could say every year that these were the roses he bought me, alive and well. I don’t have high hopes but it would be wonderful. Thank you for the knowledge to maybe make it work out.
Best of luck!
Did it work?
@@YourPalQWERTY Sadly, no. They slowly died off, one by one. It was probably because I left them out in the rain for a week. Will definitely try again next time I get flowers, now that I’ve learned a lot since then.
This is GREAT!!! Nice close ups and getting to the point without a lot of unnecessary jargon. Thank you!!
Yes, I like this channel very much. Measured tone, easy to follow and understand. Thank you, Jason! 🌹
Agree. Many of these channels have so much useless info and repeat themselves with different words.
2:07 elongated bud, no good
3:25 soft, spange cutting no good
3:57 top, semi-leaves, no good
This is the most detailed video on rose cuttings I've ever seen. And now I'm thinking of all the rose bushes growing in the neighborhood (even wild ones!) I want to grow! They had a - belated - celebration for Mother's day at my kid's kindergarten and gave to each mom, a rose. So I thought to search just in case I could propagate it and keep it. Thanks!
Just attempted to propagate multiple cuttings last night for the second time from a rose that my great grandmother owned... did NOT know where to cut OR that i needed to sterilize my tools. Thankfully, I found your video today so the remaining cuttings will have a chance. I also had never considered rose types may have patents. Excellent video- Thank you SO much!
My pleasure. I hope you're successful with your grandmother's rose.
I’m on my second batch of attempts too. It can be disheartening when you’re emotionally attached to them. I want them all to root and so far, none 💔.
To repeat the comments below ; Thank you for concise and "jargon free" advice. It's good to know that this video is actually from an expert, so can trust the advice and pointers given. Please keep making them. :)
Thanks for the encouragement.
I think your channel is brilliant, I’ve recommended to my dad.
Thanks Dawn.
I agree with the other comments. This video is the best I've watched so many over the years and gave up on propagating a rose bush from cutting due to lack of detail that you provided. Im so excited i cannot wait to have my own rose bushes from my favorite bushes. 🎉🎉🎉
Thankyou your step by step was so helpful I have watched and wasted my time on so many of these Propagating videos that my mind is spinning and most of the time they’re useless you gave me excellent advice and confidence to try this myself I really hope this works I will get back to you if they root, but again thank you so much, your video was very helpful especially for a beginner Gardner
I love ur videos! Thx so much for sharing ur knowledge with the world. It’s very generous & much appreciated by this gardener in particular.
Thanks Sherri
Hi! I'm from the Philippines and I'm gonna try this out since i LOVE roses! I hope I'll be successful... thank you so much.... From all the videos I've binge watched yours is the most informative! new subscriber here! ❤️❤️❤️
Thanks Frances
Thanks for a really great informative video. My daughter sent me a dozen roses in 4 different beautiful colors for Mother's Day and I hope to follow your instructions so I end up with at least one bush out of it. Thanks again!
Thankyou very much for this lesson.... very interesting.....greetings from England uk.
Hi,Jason! First roots and shoots from a cutting of the Bouquet Rose are here,with a bit help of Rooting Powder. Many thanks for your videos! Best regards from Vienna 🌹
Have always hated receiving flowers because I have to throw them out at one point or the other. Thankyou for this informational video. Now a good gift can be more than just a fading memory 😃.
You could also dry them
Just don't wait till the flowers are ready to throw out, the stem will have become too soft.
Hated receiving flowers really?
Throw them to a compost pile xp
I am loving your channel! So far I'm going to try this on my Russian sage and a mystery plant that I want more of. Thanks for the info.
Thanks for making this! I got a few roses that I wanted to grow from a store, and even though it seems to be too late now, I’ll actually know what to do next time
Thank you soo much. This video has taught me what happened. A while ago, I had received a beautiful bouquet for a very special occasion and I cut 2 if the stems and and stuck them in a garden pot with another plant and both of them grew. I had no idea how to care for them. Your channel has been very helpful. Both plants have been transplanted to larger pots and are now about 3' tall. I hope to continue to learn about these beautiful plants and keep them healthy.
I have just done 8 cuttings this weekend from 2 different roses fingers crossed I should get about 6 and I'm doing couple cuttings from my blue moon this week
Very honest and practical advice,thank you Sir
Thanks so much for your help I never thought I’d be able to grow a bush so I’m gonna give it a try
Thanks again
You do such a great job explaining things.
Excellent video with good information, concise and to the point. Many thanks.
Great how-to video. Appreciate your discussion of pros and cons. I didn’t know propagating roses from a bouquet was even viable. Neat! 🌹
P1
Great video, I subscribed. I have watched your videos time to time, but never about subscribing. Thank you telling and showing how to take good cutting and regrow roses. Right to the point and not all that talking about this and c that over and over again.❤
That is absolutely AMAZING 😍!!! I hope 🤞 it works for me !!! I appreciate you showing where to cut the stems at.
very good info. I love roses and other flowers, but I am on a very tight budget. My husband said we will eat first before flowers. So what I did I go to Walmart and check their plants sales and those that are wilting and dying which I think I can save it by watering it. I bought petunia last October very cheap 75 cents for 4 inch pot, my husband was kind of upset he said its gonna die and a waste of money I told him it will be ok because the roots are good. Well I am right I planted it takes care of it and now its thriving my husband cannot believe he told me I have a green thumb. I will make a video of it by tomorrow. I will try this video I have one rose bush left I will propagate it. Thanks for sharing.
Nice! And BTW, petunias super quick and easy to root from cuttings. Best luck with your rose
thank you! I can save money by propagating. Yes you are right about petunias. You are very knowledgeable with plants!
lol,,,,,,this video is what i looking for, i asked about this propagate technique on your past cutting propagate video. Thank you sir, very very very helpful.
Thank you for this video, very informative. I am excited to try this soon.
I really appreciate you mentioning the legal rights over some plants and that we should respect that, not many people think about it. I love your videos, very well made! :)
Thankyou for the upload, very informative and easy to understand instructions. I am eager to see if the works just for fun. Fingers crossed. :)
Thank you this is so timely. I was just thinking of doing this
What a great video-especially the close-ups ❤
It’s rare to find semi-hard stem from bouquet as usually it is soft, i guess it’s a way from producers to stop consumers from propagating...
Or to grow bouquets faster. They probably cut the stems very soon after they grow, so young.
Awsome info. Regarding bouquet roses, I only eve graft them to Dr. Huey to be part of a picking garden. In any other instance I’d prefer own root roses, but I don’t trust the disease resistance of bouquet roses. Roses from bouquets were breed for that (picking, blossom lifespan). But as part of a picking garden, bouquet roses are top notch and many of these varieties can’t easily be obtained any other way than cutting/rooting and grafting from bouquets.
Thanks Nicholas!
Thanks! Now I’m professional propagating florist in 10 mins! Never thought flowers could be patented or one acquire legal rights. My anxiety, misting, singing to them and hopeful prayers don’t count huh!? 😂
Learned more from your videos than any others, especially highlighting the scam vids of propagating from buds etc! In the UK and trying some bouquet roses. QUESTION: “3-4 weeks to root”, so how many weeks/months till a new plant will be fully established and producing its own flowers? 🤞 Thank you for passing on your knowledge.
I was given a rose from a customer of mine 2 weeks ago and found new growth on the leaf nodes. I’ve never grown roses from seed or propagation but I’d like to try just to see if I can do it! I’ve had great success with propagating other plant varieties so wish me luck!!
Best luck!
Thankyou for the video. I have learned alot. I never knew about patented roses.
Very informative on growing roses, thank you a lot!!!
great video... very useful, interesting information... thank you!!
Super informative and succint, thank you so much!!!
Very nice Demonstration. Thank you.
Well done. Informative and well presented. Thank you.
My pleasure. Thanks Robert
Wish you a very Happy New Year 2023! 🌹🎊
Thanks so much and a happy new year to you too!
Thank-you lots of good expert info for the beginner.
Thank you very much for the videos, very informative, will try to do in coming week
Thank you so much for this video!! I am going to try with a clipping from a bouquet rose. I figure it doesn’t hurt to try lol! All of my plants are outgrowing my house and have managed to propagate every one of them. I like a challenge 😂😊
Best luck Tanya!
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm thank you so much!!
😀
If my bouquet rose already has shoots, and you said roots first...then shoots, can I cut off the shoots in hope that some remaining nodes will developshoots in a non-fertile potting soil? Thank you
Thankyou for yhis it was just my anniversary so i hav e a bochet now❤
Thank you. I really admire and love your videos. Very informative.
You're most welcome Fred! And thanks for the encouragement.
Thank you for the informative video. Do you have to dip it in rooting hormone? Will it shot roots with out it?
Thanks
Great video, answering all the questions I had and more! Including where to cut, tool sterilization, to tent or not to tent, etc. Subscribed!
Thanks. I hope you that if you give it a try, you have good luck!
So I followed your method on how to cut. 2 out of 4 are doing well. thanks!
So good to hear!
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I have a question! one of the stem is growing leaves- about 1/2 inch long. They are very light color. I have them stored in a 2 liter soda bottle, kinda like a mini greenhouse. I used peat pods by the way. Should I start placing it by the window or just use a grow light? Right now I am storing them in the laundry room. No clue what to do now that new leaves are showing.
@@friedapplepie1872 I'd go for the sunlight. At this point, you don't need super high intensity, but enough to get photosynthesis started and keep the stems from yellowing/stretching. Have you checked for roots yet? If they've rooted, you should transition away from the soda bottle to lower the humidity.
Another great video, thanks for sharing your experience.
A question: do these same principles apply to propagating mini roses?
Miniatures are among the easiest to root - and a good place to start. Because they have short little sections between leaf sets (internodes) you might choose something with 6 or 7 nodes instead of my typical 3 or 4.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm your videos are so informative, thank you and much appreciated!
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I found a partially dead rose at the cemetery it had just a little bit of green stem on One piece and one tiny little pink bud. I brought it home and dusted the root with a little hormone and replanted it. This was late fall and it is now full of new little stems! It's a miniature rose so I wasn't expecting it to be huge but it is definitely nice and healthy! I did this once before with a little yellow rose. Cemeteries are good places to find poinsettias, mum's and roses that were put out for a specific holiday and never checked on again. I have a gigantic red encore Rose that I rescued at the cemetery where my parents are buried. It had also totally dried out but now I have it big and beautiful about three and a half foot tall and I am going to bring it back and I am going to plant it so that it will survive. I don't live that far away so I can go by and water it until it takes ahold. Over the years I have checked many of the trash barrels at the cemetery and rescued mums also. The tops are usually dry and crunchy and I just break them away and bring home the root if it shows a little green.
Love your videos. Info no drama. Thanks.
Oh wow thank you! I was wondering how to do this. :)
I have had no luck with my cuttings but your method seems a little different to others. Will definitely give it a try. I think maybe my issue has been over watering as I get a lot of rot. Going to try the mist.
Thanks. I think the temperature, humidity and air circulation make the most difference to success. Best luck!
Nice video...to the point 👍🙏
Waao... Beautiful flowers..
You have taught me so much. Thank you for your knowledge. I'm a new subscriber to your channel.
Thanks for the encouragement!
I always learn something new from you. Thanks so much!
Hi first thank you for producing great videos. My father planted roses in the family garden some 50-55years ago. A couple of them produce the most amazing fragrance and are around 5 feet high. I tried take cuttings from these but they failed. Now I think I understand why. I wanted the cuttings because when I sell the house I fear that trying to transplant them would kill them which would be awful because as I said they have the most amazing fragrance. Also I can't seem to identify the roses. Again you've produced some great videos thank you.
I can't propagate my roses but I do preserve them by drying them up side down. They are beautiful in vases for years.
How you preserve it?
Best video about cuttings!
Thanks for the encouragement Jennifer.
Detailed explanation. Good
It add more knowledge in propagation..great help for me..thanks for rhie video
Hello - I had three cut rose stems which I had hoped to propagate as they were given to me by my Mum from the spray at my Dad’s funeral. (Sorry if this sounds morbid). Two haven’t done anything but one has produced a sprig of leaves - is this likely to be residual energy in the stem, or can it be a sign it may revive? Thank you in advance for any advice you may be able to give me.
Hi Kathryn. You're right that there's stored energy in the stem, and it can use that to send new shoots - the trick is to encourage the cutting to use energy to make roots (first) instead.
Thank you for your quick response! Presumably if the shoot has appeared it may be too late for roots to grow too... I have placed it in compost with rooting powder, but I appreciate the potential may be lost now.
Excellent informative video jason. Could you do a video on set up on how to propagate with an automated misting system. Thank you jason.
You bet. As soon as I start my main propagation for the season, I'll do a vid on that topic. Thanks!
Esse canal é excelente.
Assuntos relevantes com informações confiáveis num estilo leve e agradável.
Muito obrigado
Just brilliant ❤️
When you should transplant the cutting to a bigger flower plot? Thank you. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
When the cutting has rooted well to the sides and bottom of the propagation pot or tray.
Fastastic video, thank you. 💚
I’m wanting to propagate Saskatoon bushes/trees. Anything different needed for this plant. Thanks for the well explained video. What type of soil should I use?
I haven't tried it by cuttings, but have had great luck from seed - it comes fairly true to the parent type. For cuttings, I'd try semi-hardwood with rooting powder.
Wow wonderful rose
Jason, Thank you so much Julie
Went to the river and scooped up about 16 ounces of sand in a Starbucks cup. Cut some Walmart gift roses and used honey and cinnamon as my rooting hormone. Used a half water bottle as a covering for my cup making a mini greenhouse. A week and a 1/2 later, I have 4 well rooted and leafy lavender rose shoots. The carnations that came with the roses rooted well also.
Nicely done!
Wow! Super cool. I might try the cinnamon, honey. Was it 50/50?
Great performance and top information , Thank you. Newcastle AU
What kind of container did you put the stems? Does the container have holes in the bottom?
I usually use a quart pot - and yes, with drain holes.
Can roses be propagated without rooting hormone, and by putting it in water? (I like to really be able to see the roots growing if I can before I plant them.)
Also, what do you use to clean your tools? Would vinegar or baking soda work? Or is there a specific chemical you use?
Well, I think you saw my video on rooting in water - maybe after you viewed this one. There's probably a good way to make it work, but I found it easier in potting soil. I use quaternary disinfectant (Virkon is the brand) but Lyson will work fine. Bleach, baking soda or vinegar might be okay too, but because their each a little corrosive I like the Lysol better
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you so much! And yes, I did see the other one right after! :D
Thank you so much for this video. Just started my semi-hard rose propagation a little late in the season ( Northern Ca 9b). I have in my bathroom under grow light and on a heating pad. I have a question about the mist vs the wet soil. I have it in a coco coir/perlite medium. also with a bottle over so the greenhouse effect. Listing to your advise, i should not wet the medium after this but lightly mist medium dries out. Am i understanding that correctly. Thank you for any advice.
Hi Connie. Covered yes, and grow light is optional depending on how much ambient light there is in the location. Watering/misting is something you'll need to assess based on how the potting soil is maintaining moisture. On a heating pad you may find that it dries out faster than a light mist will replace. The medium should start at low to medium moisture and your watering/misting is meant to just keep it in that range.
Hi, thank you so much for your ideas. Can you please tell me what kind of rose plant did you take those stems from? I heard that cuttings from English grafted rose do not root. I tried 2-3 times myself, it was unsuccessful. I heard that you have to graft it on a wild rose to get another plant. What should I do?
Hi sir. What did you put in that rose before you plant it? Is it a sort of sweets? I saw other videos, they put some honey on it before they plant it.
I used a rooting hormone powder - talc with 0.4% IBA to promote faster roots
Wonderful video.. at last, all the best information. I personally believe the open air is so much better, I hate pulling out dead smelly mouldy stems from the pots. Giving them water is rather difficult to judge, you just have to get it right and that’s a bit of a problem since it depends on so many other factors like temperature humidity ventilation. I love roses and my father’s garden is full of some lovely English roses and really wish I could finally get them growing..
The worst problem is mould so in fact should the medium be just a bit damp? should the cutting itself be misted? when would be the right time? Warmish early June?
Thanks again
Thanks Kate. I think you're on the right track. Warmish early June would be perfect to start cuttings. The soil should be only slightly moist, and mist the foliage to keep it from wilting off.
Great information.Thank you.
Great video! What are you using to sterilize your tools? Do you have a preferred hormone powder?
Thanks. I use a quaternary disinfectant (the trade name is Virkon). I'm using StimRoot #2 for semi-hardwood cuttings, and it works fairly well. I'll be testing a couple more rooting hormones this year to see if I get an improvement.
I live on the Lower Mainland. When would be the best time of the year to propagate semi hardwood rose cuttings? Thank you.
Where we are, June is a good time to begin
Hi. Tnx for sharing. What to substitute if u don't have rooting powder. Can honey be used?
Best close-ups of nodes being clipped ever! Thank you so much! My question: I see you planting several stems in one pot. When can you repot them? Is it difficult to separate them? Do you have a video on this? I always wondered why I had such a black thumb... now, watching videos like this, my thumb is getting greener and greener!
Thanks Cynthia. I don't have a video where I separate them, but I'll look for a chance to capture it. No, it's not too hard - just have to take your time and be gentle. It's best done before the plants root firmly together. Best luck!
Jason it's funny you say that because the only 2 times I've been successful in Bud Grafting was taking Buds from a Bunch(Bouquet) of Pink Roses I bought my Wife!
I'd actually given up after about 100 failures trying to Bud Graft a HT by the name of 'Riverview' & noticed a new shoot sprouting on a Climbing Rose I used as Stock. Didn't even know until it flowered that it was from the Pink Bouquet & the one under it sprouted shortly after I thought it was from a bunch of Yellow Roses my Kids picked for my Wife on Mother's Day but it was another Pink from the previous Bunch.
As Murphy's Law would have it, Cuttings from this very Climbing Rose I've throw into my Tropical Garden have taken Root as do most I take from it & simply stick in the Dirt take Root(but usually die as I provide them zero care/water(I'm talking several months after they've struck & grown, but when I took that cutting from the Bud Grafted Rose to try to grow a new Pink Rose bush for my Wife it failed(Rot). I still have the second one but will try Aerial Grafting to get it to take as it's Hard Wood now(as big as my Thumb!) & if it doesn't take I'll just leave it as a Hybrid as the true Flowers on it are Pink/White variegated(it's just a bit too Tall).
Thank you for this video, will give this a try! Once you water the soil initially and put in the stems thereafter you just mist the top area of the stem correct? Maybe every week depending on weather, I'm in Southern California.
Yes - the soil in the pot should remain fairly moist even without direct watering if you're keeping up on misting. The frequency of misting definitely varies by the environment. If you're keeping the cuttings under a humidity dome or tent, I'd still open and check every day or two.
What are your thoughts on stems that sprout new leaves while they're in the water? Is propagating worth a try if the stems aren't and soft and pithy? The roses began to bottleneck so I tossed them because I thought they were done.
I'm recently very much into gardening. I have cut some roses from a bouquet (just for personal use) and put them in a tiny grow box with no lights. It's placed in a sunny spot. I let it heat up and it has some water on the lid of the box. Is this a good place to grow cuttings? The weather is very unpredictable here, yesterday it was a beautiful sunny day and today it has rained a massive amount. I was afraid that if the cuttings were just outside they would drown
I'm happy to hear you're trying this. I don't do my cuttings covered like this anymore, but it's a decent way to get started. The tricky bit is keeping the right humidity for rooting. Too little, and they dry out. Too much (and with little air movement) and they rot. Look for a minimal amount of condensation on the box, and if you can keep it cracked a bit for fresh air, it may help. Good luck!
Fraser Valley Rose Farm thank you for your reply! It has two ventilation bits but I have kept them closed. I think I will have to try it again with new cuttings and keep one open. They are there for I think about a little two weeks and they haven’t changed one bit. I will keep trying 😄
@@94Sapphira Good for you. One note: you shouldn't see much change in a semi-hardwood cutting in 2 weeks. The most important part is happening in the cells at the base of the cutting. In 3 to 4 weeks, you may see callus or initial rooting, but unless the cutting begins to rot (black or brown usually from below the soil line) there's still a chance.
Hi Jason, do light purple bare root roses take longer to bud out than others? I have a strange coincidence that both of my new light purple bare root roses (one from home depot and 1 from Walmart) are both not showing any signs of budding. I have several others all colors that have already budded out
I can't say I've observed anything specific on the colors, but I do know from experience that some mauve roses are less vigorous than average. Not true for Neptune (2003) though.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm thank you 😊
Great video !! If you put arose from a bouquet in a vase with water and you start seeing new leaves but no roots, can it grow? Is it too late? After watching your video ,maybe it is.
No harm in trying, but yeah, if the leaf shoot is already growing, it may be hard to get roots in time.
thank you for the information...