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You are here: Home / Plant Propagation / Cuttings / Rooting Cuttings in December and January.

Rooting Cuttings in December and January.

Updated : June 17, 2024

63 Comments

It’s really cold and snowy here in northern Ohio in December so that means no gardening right?

Wrong!  Here’s at Mike’s Plant Farm we have been crazy busy making and sticking cuttings.

Indoors right?  Nope!  Outside.

A bed full of hardwood cuttings.
A bed full of hardwood cuttings.

The bed on left are cuttings Hardwood Cuttings that we’ve stuck between November 15th and December 10th.

These are known as hardwood cuttings and we have to wait for them to go completely dormant before we can even start doing them.  Typically with hardwood cuttings, you can start them after you have experienced a good, hard freeze.

A hard freeze is not a frost or even a heavy frost.  It’s a night when the temperatures dip down below 28 degrees and stay there for a few hours.  I use the Donkey’s Water Bucket as my freeze gauge.

When I come in in the morning and their drinking water has frozen over I know that we have finally gotten the hard freeze that I am always looking for after November 15th.  That’s usually when it occurs.

I also know that it’s now time to change out the donkey’s summer water bucket to their winter water bucket.  The winter bucket has a built-in heater that keeps their water from freezing.

Once we get the hardwood freeze that we need to start our hardwood cuttings we usually go like crazy trying to get them all done before it gets so cold that we can no longer stick them outside.

This year the weather was fairly reasonable after the hard freeze and we got a lot of them done, but last Thursday, December 8th, it was pretty cold and we had to actually remove about 2″ of soil from the top of the buckets because it was too frozen to work with.  Some of our hardwood cuttings we stick in big pots once the bed of sand gets full.

Yes, we root most of cuttings in coarse sand.

Rooted and unrooted cuttings. This is where they will spend the winter.
Rooted and unrooted cuttings. This is where they will spend the winter.

The bed to the far left are the hardwood cuttings that we just stuck.  The bed next to those are softwood cuttings that we stuck in August, they are all rooted.

The bed to the far right are cuttings that we stuck in June of 2015.  They are still in the bed because we just don’t have room to pot them up until spring.  And the bed to the middle right are cuttings that we stuck in June of 2016.

You can see how much the cuttings actually grow while still in the propagation beds.

Once the root through the sand into the soil below I won’t disturb them until they are dormant because it will shock them.  Here you can see us removing cuttings just like this.

Golden Curls Willow hardwood cuttings.
Golden Curls Willow hardwood cuttings.

Sometimes we stick our hardwood cuttings in big buckets like this filled with potting soil.  This buckets also just sit outside like you see here.  Come late spring, early summer, the cuttings are rooted.  Not 100%, but 85% or so can be expected.

Not all plants do well as hardwood cuttings.  As hardwood cuttings we do hydrangea, willows, rose of sharon, purple sandcherry, and a few other things.  Lots of other things can be done as hardwood cuttings, but Things that Root as Softwood Cuttings, we prefer to do them that way in the summer.

On this page you’ll find a list of plants, and the best way to propagate them.

Proper Nursery Tagging.
Proper Nursery Tagging.

Tag, tag, tag, tag!!!!!!!!! When growing plants for profit not only do your plants have to be tagged, but they have to be tagged with the correct name.  We tag all of our cuttings, whether in buckets or in a bed of sand, we use these aluminum plant tags because the don’t fade.

They are not super easy to read, especially if I write them, but the words are pressed into the aluminum so they do not fade.  I just drill a hole in the lip of the bucket and attach the tag with wire.  That way the tags cannot blow away or accidentally get lost.

Everything you need to know about tagging is here!

And trust me, proper tagging is more important than you can imagine!

Mike!  What if my cuttings freeze outside in the winter?

Won’t it kill them?

No, it won’t kill them,  they’ll be just fine.

I can assure you, if you are growing plants that are hardy in your zone, freezing won’t harm them a bit.  To me snow is like a “Silent Baby Sitter”.  When my cuttings are covered in snow I know they are snuggled in tightly for the winter and resting peacefully.  Like this . . .

Both rooted and unrooted cuttings buried under snow.
Both rooted and unrooted cuttings buried under snow.

Yep!  That’s how my cuttings are going to spend the winter.

Fresh stuck hardwood cuttings, snow covered.
Fresh stuck hardwood cuttings, snow covered.

As you can see, the cuttings that we just stuck in the bed on the left are barely showing.  I assure you, they are fine.  Happy as clams!

Nursery pots filled with snow covered hardwood cuttings.
Nursery pots filled with snow covered hardwood cuttings.

And now for the Nitty Gritty.

Mike, how do we actually do hardwood cuttings?  Glad you asked, The How to Is Here.

How to actually make a cutting, See this Post I did Recently.

Yeah, but does this Hocus Pocus hardwood cutting thing really work?  Yep!  It Sure Does, Here’s Proof.

Questions, comments or mean things to say?  Post them below.

Take a gander at these posts...

  • Grow Your Own Grape Plants
  • A Simple Way To Root Plants From Cuttings
  • How to Grow Roses from Cuttings
  • Propagation From Cuttings
  • Propagating Potentilla from Cuttings

Comments

  1. Frankie says

    June 2, 2021 at 2:19 pm

    Hi Mike!

    I rooted some Hydrangea paniculata hardwood cuttings in early February…now seeing some leaves pop up! Not all of them, but about a quarter of them! Very exciting. When should I pot them up into individual containers? I’m in zone 6b. Right now they are where they spent the winter, in some planters stuck in a Sandy soil mix a couple inches apart. Love the videos and site! Thanks so much!

    Frankie

    Reply
    • Mike says

      June 3, 2021 at 7:54 am

      Frankie,

      It sounds like they are doing well but probably not ready to be potted. Probably some time in July.

      Reply
      • Frankie says

        June 3, 2021 at 3:15 pm

        Thanks, Mike! July it is!

        Reply
  2. Joe t says

    December 12, 2020 at 8:24 pm

    Just curious. Do you think a fig tree would make a good hardwood cutting? I am zone 7a. I have a fig tree that I never cover and it comes back every year no matter how hard the winter was. (Hope I am not speaking too soon! LOL)

    Reply
    • Mike says

      December 14, 2020 at 9:42 am

      Joe,

      I honestly don’t know, but we have a lot of members that propagate them. I’m just not sure when. http://backyardgrowers.com/join

      Reply
      • Joe t says

        December 14, 2020 at 4:07 pm

        Thanks for an honest answer, Mike. Well I already stuck them. Not using bottom heat or anything like that. I just put a old refrigerator drawer over them to break the wind. The drawer is dark amber color plastic (?) of some sort. I will let you know what happens when I look at them next spring.

        Reply
      • Joe t says

        March 26, 2021 at 1:08 am

        Hi Mike. Just following through with the promise I made back in December. I checked on the fig tree sticks and they are rooting. I had some top growth starting and I foolishly left them uncovered thinking they could use more light and air. Would you know it, something came along and ate the buds that were forming. (Maybe a squirrel?) I left them and covered them again. They may pull through after all. What the heck. That is the fun of it. Right?

        Joe

        Reply
        • Mike says

          March 26, 2021 at 8:44 am

          Joe,

          It happens to all of us. Sometimes we shoot ourselves in the foot!

          Reply
  3. ann says

    December 7, 2020 at 10:42 am

    A guy in England sticks his hardwood cuttings in the ground next to the original plant because of the amount of rain. I am trying that below Tacoma because of the sandy silty soil.

    Reply
  4. James West says

    December 6, 2020 at 10:58 am

    Hi Mike,
    I keep seeing you mention about rooting hardwood cuttings in Winter with bottom heat. Have you made a video of setting up a cold frame with a soil heating cable? Is the soil required to maintain that heat 24/7 or should it be allowed to cool in the evenings as typically happens when the sun goes down?

    West

    Reply
    • Mike says

      December 7, 2020 at 10:16 am

      James,

      A thermostaticlly controlled heat mat is better than cables in most cases and because of how the thermostat works that temp is maintained 24/7. It really depends on what you are rooting. Many things you need no bottom heat at all. Things like Taxus and Rhododendron and other evergreens the bottom heat helps a great deal.

      http://mikesbackyardnursery.com/2015/01/easy-winter-time-plant-propagation-can-home/

      and this; http://mikesbackyardnursery.com/2016/09/hardwood-cuttings-winter-of-20152016/

      Reply
  5. Patrick Driscoll says

    December 5, 2020 at 10:04 am

    Hi Mike
    Could you do a video about propigation by air layering? For example, I have tried to air layer a Chinese Cyprus and don’t know whether to leave the the plastic soil holders on throughout the winter. II it better done with rooting hormone? etc.
    Thanks

    Reply
    • Mike says

      December 6, 2020 at 8:23 am

      Patrick,

      I intend to do that in the spring. If you air layer in the spring I say the ideal time to remove new plant is in the fall just as the plant is going dormant or right after. Then just plant it in the ground.

      Reply
  6. Jon says

    January 21, 2020 at 7:34 pm

    I’m in Seattle. Zone 9B. Dormant season stays pretty soggy. My question is, I am trying this winter hardwood cuttings to put into sand, I Do I not need to mist them?
    Is it best to wait until they show some bud growth in Spring to mist them?

    Reply
    • Mike says

      January 22, 2020 at 7:25 am

      Jon,

      No, you do not have to mist them. Come spring you can mist them once they leaf out, but with my hardwoods I never mist them. I stick them in the late winter, in potting soil, and just water them when it starts warming up. They pretty much make leaves then roots and they do fine. Years ago growers put hardwood cuttings out in the field and they only got rain water.

      Reply
  7. Ron Haddock says

    February 19, 2019 at 11:01 am

    Hello Mike,, I’m new to this but I have many friends that send me cuttings. I tell them to wait until the tree is dormant and take the cuttings from that season. One friend sent me apple cuttings in mid December . I wrapped them in damp paper towel and put them in baggies. They were kept in the refrigerator until I could get to them in mid January . I that time I potted them in a 5 gal bucket with 50-50 peat moss and perlite . It’s now Feb. 19 and they are sprouting leaves. So my question is,,, is it to early for them to be sprouting and a month long enough for the cutting to have roots ?
    Can it sprout leaves without roots ?
    Thank you for your time and videos.
    Ron H

    Reply
    • Mike says

      February 19, 2019 at 11:17 am

      Ron,

      Your cuttings do not have roots. Hardwood cuttings stuck in the winter won’t have enough roots to transplant until mid summer. Yes, they can make leaves without roots. Apples are going to be difficult as hardwood cuttings.

      Reply
      • Ron Haddock says

        February 19, 2019 at 5:56 pm

        Thank you Mike,, When is the best time to try the apple trees ?
        Thanks again

        Reply
        • Mike says

          February 20, 2019 at 9:25 am

          Ron,

          Apple trees are usually budded or grafted onto a root stock, usually not done by cuttings. But you can try in the early summer, http://mikesbackyardnursery.com/2015/01/easy-summertime-plant-propagation-techniques-can-home/

          Reply
  8. Lindalee Stimer says

    December 28, 2018 at 8:45 pm

    Hi Mike, I started some grapevines in course sand. They grew beautifully, when I took one out to see how well rooted it was, it seemed as though the sand cut the roots almost completely off. How would remove them without doing damage?

    Reply
    • Mike says

      December 29, 2018 at 7:35 am

      Lindalee,

      You have to scoop under the cuttings and loosen the sand. It’s best to remove them when they are dormant unless you can do so without breaking roots.

      Reply
  9. GoldDriller says

    December 15, 2018 at 1:55 pm

    Hello Mike . Just a story of testimony.
    10 yrs ago I had major shoulder surgery. For the next 9 months I had one functioning arm and a body full of pain medication. While laid up dazed and confused in bed ,, I rolled my head looking out the window to discover 6-8 inch seedlings as volunteers. As a joke I pulled up a number of seedlings and made an Ebay listing . SHOCKINGLY they Sold . Thinking I now have an active way to make a useful hourly wage by selling seedlings with one arm … it’s only been recent that I was introduced to your web site . January I will be purchasing a license . YOU are the one that has taken me from 10 yrs of practicing to the next step level of my Nursery . Up till now I have been surviving, with your help and direction I will now flourish… thank you for giving confidence and courage to put my life back together again.

    Reply
    • Mike says

      December 16, 2018 at 10:24 am

      Thank you, I appreciate that.

      Reply
  10. Baz says

    December 15, 2018 at 1:09 pm

    Hi Mike,
    I have a shrub that is called a Butterfly Bush but it is not one of the normal hardy BB’s. It is called a Tropical plant, so I bring it in each fall and it stays in the garage or in the house. Do you know how one would propagate these plants? I bought it about 6-8 years ago, and the place where I bought it, can’t remember having the plants. The flowers on the bush look so much like a butterfly. Real neat plant.
    Baz

    Reply
    • Mike says

      December 16, 2018 at 10:24 am

      Baz,

      I would say softwood cuttings in the summer. http://mikesbackyardnursery.com/2015/01/easy-summertime-plant-propagation-techniques-can-home/

      Reply
      • Carl Compton says

        December 18, 2018 at 5:11 pm

        Mike Can I plant a hardy pear tree now that I bought in October but never planted? We are having nice days now about 52 degrees with nights in 40’s . The previous month it was teens & 20’s. I had it in out of the cold but i wouild like to plant it now or would that shock it too much.; I kow we will have more winter We are in SW Missouri 120 miles south of Kansas City. I think zone 5.

        Reply
        • Mike says

          December 19, 2018 at 9:15 am

          Carl,

          By all means plant it. You can plant year round as long as the ground isn’t too frozen to dig. Plants are always happiest in the ground.

          Reply
  11. Rita Griebel says

    December 15, 2018 at 12:57 pm

    Have kiwi plants and am interested to see if I can make hardwood cuttings with them. Has anyone tried this?
    Bought the kiwi a few years ago. The male must have died because as yet we haven’t received any kiwi fruit. Order 3 male kiwi for next year as we are going to put us 2 rows of kiwis. will have them sit with our other kiwi plants and see what happens.

    Reply
    • Becky Sewell says

      December 5, 2020 at 12:11 pm

      Hi Rita,
      I hope you tried making hardwood kiwi cuttings and they’ve thrived. I took my first kiwi cuttings in the autumn of 2019, trying to get them from different vines that were growing up over a large arbor in Ithaca, NY. Some had fruit on them – I’d never tasted fuzzless hardy kiwis (they look and sort of taste like large seedless grapes). I was intrigued with the way the ‘clusters’ grow right along the stems, not dangling like grapes. Anyway, I took branch-tip cuttings, clipped off the leaves and stuck the naked twigs in two large pots of ProMix, and left them outside all winter. Most began to leaf out this spring, and they put on some new growth – yay! I left them in their pots, as I have no place yet to put them. This fall I realized that a large clump of leafless “unknown plants” was actually kiwi, right here in Union Springs, NY, essentially across the street from where my parents live, Not seeing any fruit, and not knowing if they were male or female plants, I took cuttings from several places and stuck them in a couple of large pots of ProMix. I spoke with a near neighbor who knew the history of the kiwis, and told me they used to bear, but hadn’t for a few years. I’m hoping that the two batches of differently-sourced cuttings I have will eventually get together and produce fruit. I’ve mulched them all – and all my other cuttings, seedlings, and potted plants (purchased and home-grown) – with leaves I collected from along the village streets. People here are quite meticulous about raking and bagging leaves and grass clippings, leaving the bags by the street for the village to pick up and take to THEIR compost pile. This fall I preempted them and took home as many as I could pack into my little Subaru Outback, dumping them ON my yard to cover flowerbeds, pots, and propagation areas where I’m hoping to build up nice soil so I can stick lots of things in the future. Potting soil simply costs TOO MUCH to buy! My yard is full of black walnut and thorny honeylocust trees – both are TRASH in my opinion – and I want to cut them down, replacing them with fruit & nut trees of my own choosing, pruning them to stay small, and creating a food-forest and a hedgerow/windbreak around our 2/3-acre property that will supply the birds and wildlife with enough edibles so they’ll leave MY things alone! (I can dream, can’t I?!?!)

      Mike – you are my inspiration! I started reading your website when I lived in Colorado, but was at too high & dry an elevation to grow very much, although I tried awfully hard. Now I’m your neighbor, here in central NY, and I’m growing LOADS of things I love – forsythia is absolutely too easy – I have hundreds of cuttings rooting and growing! I’ll have to start visiting the Members Area next spring and offering some of what I have. (I’m a paid member, but have actually only ONCE gone in there!) Thanks for your amazingly helpful posts. I’m sharing your website with folks on Facebook’s plant propagation group. Hopefully, you’ll get some new members from among them! I’m also in a number of fig-lovers groups, sharing your propagation hints there, as well. I’ve been trying to grow Chicago Hardy figs here for the last 3 years or so, but had no luck yet with getting fruit. Hopefully NEXT year!

      Keep looking UP! Blessings to you and yours,
      Becky

      Reply
      • Mike says

        December 6, 2020 at 8:22 am

        Thank you Becky and I look forward to seeing you in the members area.

        Reply
  12. Ed Crockett says

    April 7, 2018 at 6:29 pm

    your plant heating pad where do I go to find them? what sizes do they come in?
    what should I expect to pay for one?
    Any help will be appreciated.
    Thank You in advance

    Reply
    • Mike says

      April 8, 2018 at 9:00 am

      Ed,

      They come in all sizes from a greenhouse supply store. Price? I have no idea but they can get expensive because most good ones need a separate thermostat.

      Reply
  13. Jeannette M. Wilson says

    January 25, 2018 at 10:11 am

    Hi Mike!
    I have a 25 year old Old Gold Juniper that got over run with honey suckle vines and mimosa, etc. It is almost dead, but there is enough live sticking out that I could try to root some. (want some of THIS plant, because when I trimmed a limb off years ago-it re-sprouted from the trunk and grew a brand new limb-I don’t think junipers usually do this, do they?
    Anyway, I’m in a transition zone in East Tennessee (Smoky Mts. zone 6b/7a) and even though the temps were in the single digits for a couple of weeks, they have now been just below 50 in the day and around 23 or so at night.
    Can I still do hardwood cuttings in sand outside?
    Or do I need to do hardwood cuttings (and for how long) on a heat mat inside?
    (Wish I’d joined up back then, when it was cheaper!)
    Thanks,
    Jeannette M. Wilson

    Reply
    • Mike says

      January 26, 2018 at 6:57 am

      Jeanette,

      I ideally do them inside now over a heat mat. That should work.

      Reply
  14. Любовь says

    December 13, 2017 at 12:45 pm

    You inspire me to new experiments! Thank you!
    I did not manage the cuttings of roses in the newspaper
    probably they need to be cut later
    sorry for the wrong speech
    this is google translator

    Reply
    • jim says

      December 14, 2017 at 2:44 pm

      will japonise maples grow in zone 10, south fla,

      Reply
      • Mike says

        December 15, 2017 at 12:26 pm

        Jim,

        There are some that will grow in warmer zones. See this; http://japanesemaplelovers.com/growing-japanese-maples-in-hot-climates/

        Reply
  15. Linda Hunter says

    December 13, 2017 at 10:33 am

    I am living in Tennessee (once a northeast Ohioan!) I have Nandina’s for shrubs and wish to grow a few more. Pulled out the hollys as they grow too fast here and require too much pruning! These Nandinas are a shrub type that turn red in the winder. They do not loose their leaves and do not have berries like the native type. Are they a hardwood or softwood? Thank you! Love your articles. We use them in our garden club at times!

    Reply
    • Mike says

      December 13, 2017 at 2:21 pm

      Linda,

      Lots of things can be done either way, so I’d try some now while you are thinking of it, and if that doesn’t work try some in June.

      Reply
  16. Nicola says

    July 26, 2017 at 2:48 am

    I like the simplicity of this method. I have two questions: first I read some descriptions that you bury hardwood cuttings first in the soil then dig them out and then stick them. Seems a bit cumbersome to me and I would probably forget about the buried cuttings…Why would one do that?
    I like willows but I would get in big trouble propagating them they are regarded as a weed here, were can I find a good list of plants that can be propagated via hardwood cuttings? elderberry? wormwoods? I did currents and Josta like this but we have a pesky borer in out area and I don’t do these plants anymore (until I found an organic solution to this problem).

    Reply
    • Mike says

      July 26, 2017 at 7:03 am

      Nicola,

      The idea of burying cuttings is old school but often done because the ground was frozen and they could stick directly in the field. And burying them actually kept them more moist. Today I stick most of my hardwood cuttings before the ground freezes and some just as the ground is thawing in the spring. Here’s a list; http://www.freeplants.com/howtodowhat.htm and this; http://mikesbackyardnursery.com/2015/01/easy-winter-time-plant-propagation-can-home/

      Reply
  17. Marilyn Swanson says

    January 30, 2017 at 1:21 pm

    Hi Mike, I really enjoy all that you have in your newsletters, but I never see anything about sun and shade. My yard is shade. Can I still root cuttings? Thanks

    Reply
    • Mike says

      January 30, 2017 at 3:39 pm

      Marilyn,

      Yes, you can root cuttings in shade. But once they get roots and start growing they’ll do much better with some sunshine.

      Reply
  18. Sharon Singletary says

    January 8, 2017 at 10:31 am

    Can I get a list of wholesalers so I can purchase some plants, I’m not a member of your group so I cant buy from ya all. I would like to become a member , maybe you can tell me how to . I would like to get some purple sand cherry’s and Golden Curls Willows. Thanks so much I greatly appreiciate you

    Reply
    • Mike says

      January 8, 2017 at 10:35 am

      Sharon,

      I can only share that kind of information with members. We will be accepting new members on January 10th. The trial is only $7.00. http://backyardgrowers.com/join

      Reply
  19. Rick Wallwork says

    January 6, 2017 at 9:40 am

    Hi Mike, thank you so much for all the great information. I’m getting started on hardwood deciduous cuttings and read through all your info – but … I’m trying to do cuttings of river birch, white birch, and beech – however, I’m not finding pencil-thick branches with buds – rather, the new woody growth with buds is about 1/8″ thick at most. Will these work? If not, what am i missing?

    Thanks, Rick

    Reply
    • Mike says

      January 6, 2017 at 1:04 pm

      Rick,

      Most trees such as these are grown seed and not cuttings. Most don’t do well from cuttings. Specific varieties are then grafted or budded on to seedlings. But things like River Birch, white birch and standard beech can be grown from seed. Most seeds ripen in the fall. Me? I usually buy tree seedlings, but somebody has to grow them and there is a pretty strong market for them.

      Reply
  20. The above is absolutelu accurate if not even an understatement of the impact of Lyme on sufferers. I simHHply wish more MDs would understand this! says

    December 21, 2016 at 5:49 pm

    Mike – Thank you for the most positive skill oriented newsletter on the internet!! Your info makes the
    internet a valuable positive asset – Wonderful holidays and a happy healthy 2017.

    Reply
    • Albert McBee says

      December 15, 2018 at 7:08 pm

      Mike… I was hospitalized for 14 days this Summer and it took all of 10 days for the doctors to figure out I had Lyme. I was near death before they started the proper combination of antibiotics to kill the Lyme.
      The doctors took all 10 days to run tests and discover the cause.
      This is nothing to laugh at. Lyme is deadly.

      Reply
      • Mike says

        December 16, 2018 at 10:22 am

        Wow Albert, I’m glad they got it figured out.

        Reply
  21. Bob says

    December 19, 2016 at 11:59 am

    The link to this page, received in the email posting, did not work for my computer(s). I sent the error message(s) to the “support team” (which turned out to be Mike) and he fixed me up.
    THANKS FOR THE SUPPORT!

    Reply
  22. Anonymous says

    December 17, 2016 at 8:30 pm

    How do you live up there

    Reply
  23. Roger Bittinger says

    December 17, 2016 at 6:30 pm

    I just receved a bunch of pants from Harborday plants what do I do with them it says to plant as soon as possible its 14 dregrees out side

    Reply
  24. Netta Pickering says

    December 17, 2016 at 5:01 pm

    HI Mike, I have been rooting cuttings for many years, not for sale or on a big scale but just because I get a kick out of it! I have rooted roses, hydrangeas, Forsythia, Althea, azaleas, I have also rooted Dragon wing begonias, and am currently trying to root a jade plant, I found a couple of pieces that were broken of a big plant. I also have a Kalanchoe that has rooted from a leaf, I’m hoping it will bloom next year.. Your site is very informative. Keep up the good work. I am eighty years old and now live in Jacksonville, Florida. where it’s supposed to be near 80 degrees tomorrow!

    Reply
    • Dave lang says

      December 14, 2017 at 5:52 am

      81 yo and Tallahassee fl. I have rooted all kinds of plants which are now flourishing in my landscape. Never too old for sure

      Reply
      • Mike says

        December 14, 2017 at 11:37 am

        Nice job Dave!

        Reply
  25. Bruce says

    December 17, 2016 at 10:49 am

    I live in Florida, it never freezes. Does that matter?

    Reply
    • Mike says

      December 18, 2016 at 8:54 am

      Bruce,

      No, it doesn’t matter, your plants still go dormant in the winter. You’ll just have to water or wet your cuttings more in the winter that I do.

      Reply
      • Bruce says

        December 18, 2016 at 9:39 am

        Thank you.

        Reply
  26. Eileen Conklin says

    December 17, 2016 at 10:21 am

    We’re in central NC (zone 7b). The early hardy camellias are in bloom now. So not dormant? Can I do hardwood cuttings on these camellias now?

    Reply
    • Mike says

      December 18, 2016 at 8:58 am

      Eileen,

      I can’t say for sure. I think Camellias are best done in the summer. http://mikesbackyardnursery.com/2015/01/easy-summertime-plant-propagation-techniques-can-home/

      Reply
      • Dean says

        December 15, 2018 at 12:25 pm

        Camellias late-August, outside, mist, bottom heat. Leave in propagation flat at least a full year. Roots very reliably.

        Reply
  27. Barrye says

    December 17, 2016 at 9:41 am

    Just want to wish you happy holidays and thank you for one of the few regular postings that is ALWAYS a valuable read.

    Reply

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