barrosinc
Masterpiece
So if a tree has no terminal bud the lack of auxin will not allow for a cutting or air layer to strike?
I am having 100% success on my air layers for the last two or three years. I've only layered vertical trunks and branches, and I've used the pot method. Crabapple is easy. If you do it right, it is almost certain to succeed.
???So if a tree has no terminal bud the lack of auxin will not allow for a cutting or air layer to strike?
Yes you can cut it in half to make 2 cuttings.???
From one branch can I cut it in half and get two cuttings or does a cutting have to have a terminal bud?
I started to think about stickying threads that are very specifically related to the kinds of questions we see over and over on the site and have really good guides or "how-tos". Air-layering, grafting, propagation, etc. I might move some to our resource area after they have been discussed for a while.
I think it's a great idea! Also adding a bonsai "calendar" with times of the year to perform certain work, like repotting, pruning, wiring, etc. I know the tricky part is how to explain this based on weather which varies so much from location to location.
Yes.When the air layering is complete and is removed do you then pot it in your normal bonsai soil?
Yes.
But roots grown in sphagnum are fragile. I put these in a plastic pot and stabilized so that the roots won't get moved around.
yesJust to be clear you put the layer with sphagnum still attach in the center of the pot then surround with bonsai soil?
Just to be clear you put the layer with sphagnum still attach in the center of the pot then surround with bonsai soil?
You don't have to worry about sphagnum in your top dressing. Once the living moss is established, the sphagnum disappears.I would say sphagnum has no place in my yard at all....
But I did find green Moss growing on some of my 50/50 top dressing recently...
But.......I may have a safer media to do this with than sphagnum too so......
Sorce
Sphagnum in pots rots roots for me in winter with no question.
If I'm understanding you correctly. If you put leaves between the two layers of section D you are turning it into section C. The only difference I can possibly come up with is the amount of leaves in between the two points. And my opinion is the more leave you have between the two points the better your odds would be. That is to say the more leaves the more support the new roots would have.Hi All,
I have read through this amazing thread ( wondered if it was in the resources section) and have a question. I think someone else asked it also, with conflicting answers.
Using Bonsainut (admin) picture from above he marks a section D. I note that where there is NO leaves between air-layers the technique at lower layer will likely fail.
BUT, If there were leaves between both portions of section D, and you were desperate for many trees ( oops me kind of) then WOULD BOTH PORTIONS OF 'D' send roots? As there is an interrupted flow of food. Eg. Stops at first girdle.
Hope I explained myself?
Charles.