Thankyou

How much seasol to water please?Jamie wrote:get them in a seasol bath and leave them for a week or two and you should get some new root nubletsthen put them into a pot or the ground and you should be good
I was wondering about these other two methods, what's involved?Bretts wrote:I would say that with cuttings such as this it is always worth a try. Nothing ventered nothing gianed.
I tried an olive cutting last year and it died pretty quickly. I now think it is alot to do with the tuber at the bottom of olive stumps that creates the succes of the flat bottom cut. People get some amazing results with the lignotuber of a gum but you can't do the same with cuttings of a gum.
It is well worth tring them in a seasol bath. I myself would try it in a very strong mix as well.
There are other ways that may work as well. Using rooting hormone and bottom heat. Or just bury the whole cutting until spring . When you dig them up they should have started to callous over at the base.
I would try as many different ways as you can manage.
Haha Glenda!Glenda wrote:Missy, you brute! Just scratch the bark with a fingernail and you will be able to see if the underneath is green![]()
Good to hear you are having some luck. If they are still green a month after potting, in my experience you are sure of them taking. I have had one or two die after this stage, but when I pulled them up to throw them out, they had roots, so they died from some other cause.![]()
Glenda