How To Plant Rose Branches Into Potatoes And A Week Later Have New And Beautiful Buds

 

If you want to decorate your garden with beautiful rose bushes but did not want to spend astronomical sums to buy all the necessary seedlings, here is a simple trick that can save you money and at the same time will guarantee a final result on top of your most expectations. Get from cut branches some rose bushes is possible even if you are not great gardening experts. Just take a little time available and follow step by step the instructions given here.If your friends or your neighbor have one or more copies of particularly beautiful roses you want, you ask politely to be able to have a few sprigs of those plants. Usually to entrench cut twigs they are immersed in the water on the side of the cut but this practice usually does not give good results and only a small number of branches can produce roots.  The multiplication of rose plants from cuttings requires some more attention to be successful. Just have a potato on hand to increase their chances of getting a beautiful rosebush from a common severed branch.

First, get yourself one or more preferably earthenware pots and fill them with soil rich in nutrients mixed with little river sand to increase drainage. Choose a rose plant you particularly like and cut a sprig not too long making a diagonal cut. With gentle eliminate both the leaves and thorns and any branches connected to the main one.Get yourself a clean nail or similar sharp object and practice at the center of the potato a blind hole. Place inside the cavity the sprig but remember to only enter one for each tuber.  Place the potato on the ground and cover it completely with dirt.  Water thoroughly and remember to always keep the soil moist but not exceed otherwise we risk creating the rot. 

Place the pots in a non windy area and away from direct sunlight that could inhibit the rooting of cuttings.At this point there is nothing left but to wait for the twigs to take root and begin to sprout slowly. To see results you must wait from six to about twenty days. The new seedlings can then be transplanted to another location depending on your needs but only when you should have a strong enough roots to survive and react optimally to a shift.

If you want to protect the cuttings from excessive climatic fluctuations or other adversity, you can place around each individual cuttings a bottle cut in half, thus creating a kind of mini greenhouse.With this extremely simple and effective method you can have all the rose bushes that you want at a very low cost. Simply cut a few sprigs to the varieties you prefer and proceed as indicated. Varieties which are more difficult to find or cultivate can be played back with this simple DIY system.

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