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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

"Rooting" for Success!

As I mentioned earlier, I love roses. They're a challenge to grow and I love how they smell. (Well, some of them are a challenge. Some of them grow like weeds.)


Just Joey Hybrid Rose

My favorite rose in my garden is my Just Joey rose. It has a sweet fruity fragrance and an ethereal apricot glow. Every spring as the thick blanket of snow recedes, I poke around the bush looking for evidence of life. It greets me as little swollen red protuberances on the rose's stem. It occured to me this year, after a particularly hard, cold winter, that the rose may not return every year. Some day, maybe next April, after removing the snow and sheltering leaves, I may uncover a dead plant; a bit of scrap for the compost bin.

Well, a summer without Just Joey...I dare not think about it!

That's when I heard about rooting cuttings from roses. Every place I consulted said a cultivar should be more than 20 years old to be legally rooted from a cutting. The lovely Just Joey was first introduced in 1972.

My initial source is the website located here. Now, I didn't read the directions very well. Basically I just read the word "mason jar," looked at the pictures and went for it. My steps were as follows:

1. I waited for the first roses of the summer to bloom and fade.

2. When they started to look a faded with some petals falling off, I watered them a whole lot at night.

3. I took the cuttings in the morning when the plant would be most hydrated.

4. I did follow the directions in that I cut below some leaves and wounded the stem a little bit.

5. Immediately let the cuttings float in a large bowl of water and took my mason jars full of seed starting dirt. I poked holes in the dirt with a pencil.

6. Next, I dipped the cut ends of the cuttings in rooting hormone and gently put them in the pre-made holes.

7. Finally, I over-watered them and put a sandwich bag over each mason jar with a cutting to keep the humidity in.

8. I have misted them every day for two and a half weeks now.

My initial cuttings looked like this:



I made a total of five cuttings. Two of them I watered less, and one is in this really lumpy potting soil with a lot of pieces of bark because I ran out of the seed starting stuff. One has died of some sort of mold infection. It was one of the ones I over-watered. (You can see some evidence of my over-watering in the jar closest to the camera.)

I repotted the others two that were over-watered in some dry soil. Some of the leaves had turned yellow and I cut those off, but they are, thus far, alive. When I repotted them I didn't see any roots yet even though one shows signs that it may put out growth soon. I reapplied rooting hormone and returned them to their jars with new, dry soil. I'm trying to leave them alone this time, because it's possible that I was loving them to death.

This experiment may be a failure, but it has been fun. I'll keep you posted!

Changing My Focus...

I tried to do a blog about my life. I really did.

Time to face facts, though. My life is pretty normal. Some bad things have happened. A lot of good things have happened. I'm not special.

This past year I've been working my way through an accelerated nursing program to get my bachelor's of science in nursing. It has been difficult and I'm exhausted. Anything worth doing is difficult, of course.

I used to be a designer. That degree was also difficult to get, too. It didn't make me happy, though. I didn't feel passionate about it. Nursing, it turns out, makes me happy. Brightening the day of someone who's in the hospital is the most satisfying work I can think of. It's great when someone feels better at the end of the day than they did at the beginning.

This blog isn't about nursing, though. This blog is about hobbies.

I have a lot of hobbies. Many of them have been neglected lately, but I haven't neglected my roses. I've only moderately neglected my gardening overall.

I also enjoy crochet and baking. With all of these things I'm a novice, but there are a lot of us novices out there and we can learn from one another's mistakes. I will begin writing about my current mistake later this week. Hopefully I will learn to post pictures by then.