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Over the Garden Fence

Winter considerations for propagating plants

hands in blue gloves pruning dormant twig

Dormant winter pruning always leaves a mess of trimmings that usually end up being composted or placed in your yard bin. There is another use for those trimmings; you can us them to create plant clones!

Plant propagation is the science and practice of creating new plants. This can be done with woody trees and shrubs or softer, herbaceous plants.

When you take your trimmings from your woody species, you want to keep only those that are healthy and show no disease. Discard any that pieces that are discolored, have spots, are soft or mushy, etc.

Healthy trimmings should be bundled, kept in a cool location, and not allowed to dry out. If you are going to wait until closer to spring to begin your propagating, you need to find a suitable storage site. Refrigerators or coolers can be used if you plan on keeping them indoors. It is a best practice that these refrigerators be used for only plant materials due to certain foods (apples, cantaloupe, pears, etc.) producing ethylene, a plant-ripening hormone that can affect storage life of plant materials and can speed up the growth of certain pathogens. Bundled trimmings also can be kept in an unheated sheltered environment like a shed or garage.

Woody cuttings should contain four to six nodes on each piece. Length of the cutting will depend on the internode lengths or the space between nodes. Internode growth depends on the growth rate for the plant and the weather.

Making cuts into the dormant wood is what starts the propagation process. Making the initial wound creates hormonal changes affecting growth and development. Follow-up cuts are usually made if you are going to graft or bud your cuttings to enhance their growth.

Grafting is putting two or more species of a plant together for the enhanced benefits, such as dwarfing, improved disease resistance, or cold hardiness. Budding is the insertion of buds or nodes of a plant into the stem of a rootstock plant. In both practices, the top portion of the graft or the inserted bud will be the desired variety you will see during the growing season whether you chose it for its flower, fruit, or leaf.

These two types of plant propagation can be done during the winter and kept under growing conditions (temperature, light, humidity, etc.) depending on the species you are working with. Grafting, budding, and plant propagation can be done on many types of plants during the winter, not just the hardwoods.

High humidity and moisture are going to be important during post-cut and post-grafting due to the scion portions (part of the plant above the graft) not receiving water since their xylem has been cut and they have no roots. Once the callus tissue seals the wound and the cambium connects between pieces, water and nutrient transportation will resume. In the case of taking cuttings to create a new plant, high humidity is needed until adventitious roots form. Once the cambium connects or adventitious roots form, reduce the humidity to normal growing conditions and resume normal watering. 

Many Extension resources have information on how to propagate plants. When working with a new plant it is recommended to do your research into the best way to propagate and its preferred care conditions.

Plant propagation is one of those fun sciences with the rewards that keep on giving! Have fun and experiment with your favorite plant this winter.

For more information on plant propagation, check out the University of Illinois Extension’s Four Seasons Gardening session at go.illinois.edu/FourSeasonsVegetativePropagation.

 

About the author: Bruce J. Black is the University of Illinois Extension Horticulture Educator serving Carroll, Lee, and Whiteside, & Boone, DeKalb, and Ogle counties. Black’s primary areas of expertise are in fruit and vegetable production, plant propagation, and community and youth garden education.