I told the owner that it would look great as a piece of drifted wood in my fish tank. He knocked on my door today and gave me ...a piece of drifted wood

The stump hardly has any root left on it. I put in in the soil but doubt that it would survive.
I doubt the seasol will help all that much... but you might like to dip it in some root hormone, that might helpkvan64 wrote:I don't have any vitB but will a crushed pill of A-Z multivitamine work?Guess not. I'll pull it out and deep in the dilluted seasol instead.
I have dusted a pinch of rooting hormone powder prior to planting. However, I was afraid that the trunk would die before it has the chance to grow any root (the process that could take weeks).Japh wrote:I assume the vitamin B suggestion was because vitamin B stimulates the natural root hormone in the plant?
if you get to it quick enough with the b vitamin this will help alot with that. take a look at bretts post on a native i think it was, it has been in a bucket of water for months and is still surving, and it was the top of a trunk chopkvan64 wrote:I have dusted a pinch of rooting hormone powder prior to planting. However, I was afraid that the trunk would die before it has the chance to grow any root (the process that could take weeks).Japh wrote:I assume the vitamin B suggestion was because vitamin B stimulates the natural root hormone in the plant?
To keep the trunk alive, you need to maintain the capillary action that sucks the water up through it. So probably putting it in water with some vitamin B solution would be fine. There's not much in the way of foliage, so that's in your favour, because there's less demand on the roots.kvan64 wrote:So, should I keep it in the pot still and just add seasol, vitamineB solution as the rooting hormone is already there? or should I pull it out now and set it in a bucket then add seasol, vitamineb and some rooting hormone? Will the cocktail have any advert effect?
I would recommend stripping a part of the bark back to the cambium (where you want roots to take) and after you've applied Rootex (Root Hormone) planting it in a 1:1 mix of Sphagnum Moss Peat and Sharp Sand, And be sure to keep it very moist, until it has grown a few roots.kvan64 wrote:I have dusted a pinch of rooting hormone powder prior to planting. However, I was afraid that the trunk would die before it has the chance to grow any root (the process that could take weeks).Japh wrote:I assume the vitamin B suggestion was because vitamin B stimulates the natural root hormone in the plant?
i would put it in the bucket with the b vitamin solution, wouldnt worry bout the seasol, that promotes new growth, you dont have any on that one there matekvan64 wrote:So, should I keep it in the pot still and just add seasol, vitamineB solution as the rooting hormone is already there? or should I pull it out now and set it in a bucket then add seasol, vitamineb and some rooting hormone? Will the cocktail have any advert effect?