Cuttings: aeroponic cloning box or seed tray and humidity lid?

Which system?

  • Aeroponic

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Humidity tray and dome

    Votes: 6 100.0%

  • Total voters
    6

JonW

Shohin
Messages
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Reaction score
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Location
Pittsburgh PA
USDA Zone
6
The seeds trays are cheaper, but is there a significant benefit to aeroponic? I have a grow tent with light and heat for winter and want to improve success with some harder to propagate species. Last summer was humid/wet and I had crazy success with cuttings, but this year I really struggled due to dryness despite a spray system.
 
I do a bit of everything.

  1. I've had an aeroponic propagator for 4 years now and it generates the vast majority of the cuttings I root. I have a 40 cell model. I absolutely recommend using an aeroponic propagator.
    • I'd guess I generate over 100 rooted cuttings per season.
    • It can't do everything but it can root a lot of things and it is quicker and is more obvious what's going on than other mechanisms.
    • certain species have fantastic results where I'd never been able to get them to root previously: Japanese maples, Italian Alder, Chinese Ash, Ginkgo, Korean Hornbeam, Crabapples and European hornbeam/Crataegus.
    • there are species which will root in 2 weeks: Ficus, Chinese elms, Chinese ash, Zelkova serrata, Plectranthus ernestii and Lonicera nitida. I even wire some cutting prior to putting them in the propagator because they root 100%.
  2. Heated cables and a substrate bed in my walk-in plastic greenhouse
    • I keep trying this but it's not a success by any means
    • hard to control the drying out - easy to fuck up.
  3. Normal cuttings in pots (sometimes in plastic bags) in my greenhouse
    • It works well for certain species - Pyracantha and quince are good example here - won't root in aeroponic propagator.
    • woody cuttings don't like the wetness in the AP.
  4. Cuttings outside in a garden bed
    • Easy rooting species work fine, anything else, ymmv.
I think I paid €125/$135 for the aeroponic propagator and it's generated more decent rooted cuttings in the last 4 years than I've had from other methods combined over the last 20. Get one.
 
I do a bit of everything.

  1. I've had an aeroponic propagator for 4 years now and it generates the vast majority of the cuttings I root. I have a 40 cell model. I absolutely recommend using an aeroponic propagator.
    • I'd guess I generate over 100 rooted cuttings per season.
    • It can't do everything but it can root a lot of things and it is quicker and is more obvious what's going on than other mechanisms.
    • certain species have fantastic results where I'd never been able to get them to root previously: Japanese maples, Italian Alder, Chinese Ash, Ginkgo, Korean Hornbeam, Crabapples and European hornbeam/Crataegus.
    • there are species which will root in 2 weeks: Ficus, Chinese elms, Chinese ash, Zelkova serrata, Plectranthus ernestii and Lonicera nitida. I even wire some cutting prior to putting them in the propagator because they root 100%.
  2. Heated cables and a substrate bed in my walk-in plastic greenhouse
    • I keep trying this but it's not a success by any means
    • hard to control the drying out - easy to fuck up.
  3. Normal cuttings in pots (sometimes in plastic bags) in my greenhouse
    • It works well for certain species - Pyracantha and quince are good example here - won't root in aeroponic propagator.
    • woody cuttings don't like the wetness in the AP.
  4. Cuttings outside in a garden bed
    • Easy rooting species work fine, anything else, ymmv.
I think I paid €125/$135 for the aeroponic propagator and it's generated more decent rooted cuttings in the last 4 years than I've had from other methods combined over the last 20. Get one.
Have you ever tried bald cypress in your aeroponic propagator?
 
Have you ever tried bald cypress in your aeroponic propagator?
I sprouted this bit of bald cypress twig in my hydroponic garden. Although it sprouted leaves, it wasn't showing any roots coming through the peat medium, so i placed the peat insert into this pot, watered the whole thing and placed it in a zip lock bag. I'm afraid to put it outside,because our winter temperatures in memphis can go from 68 to 20 in the same week. So my question is: dark and cool but not freezing garage or in the warm house? Is light important for it right now?
 

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I sprouted this bit of bald cypress twig in my hydroponic garden. Although it sprouted leaves, it wasn't showing any roots coming through the peat medium, so i placed the peat insert into this pot, watered the whole thing and placed it in a zip lock bag. I'm afraid to put it outside,because our winter temperatures in memphis can go from 68 to 20 in the same week. So my question is: dark and cool but not freezing garage or in the warm house? Is light important for it right now?

If it's in a bag, then the only two factors that should matter are light and temperature. Warm and bright, right?
 
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