Rose Gardening : How to Graft Rose Plants
Tips, Tricks
Rose plants are easy to graft by taking an angled cutting from one plant, cutting a slit in the stem of another plant and binding the two together with honey and floral tape. Mix several different kinds of roses onto one bush with helpful information from a sustainable gardener in this free video on roses. Expert: Yolanda Vanveen Bio: Yolanda Vanveen is a third-generation flower grower and sustainable gardener who lives in Kalama, Washington. She is the owner of vanveenbulbs.com and has sold flower bulbs for more than 15 years. Filmmaker: Daron Stetner
Comments
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its awesome
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i am going to try this and thank you.
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Hahaha the honey helps because it gives it sugar to help it root? That's not how it works..... Honey has HCl that acts as a fungicide to prevent rot.
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can you Graff my root
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So was the sugar to feed the spider at 1:35 as well? Nice lady but HORRIBLE video! Terminology is wrong. The description of the size of the clippings or the receiving plants stem were not mentioned, or even the "age" of the stem (according to the rings from season to season) hard stems vs. soft stems. How many nodes weren't talked about. Rose plant anatomy is fairly critical in grafting (no rooting going on in video or after, the graft either "takes" or does "Not take". I have NEVER seen her specific type of "grafting" I would NEVER RECOMMEND this tutorial. EVEN SCISSORS ARE A NO NO! COME ON! Please don't waste any time or your roses on this attempt. PLUS seeing end results are NORMAL a good idea (although I have found very few videos that show the complete product) When I "take note" of the names of the better ones I will add them to this page. Happy grafting!!!! and proper tutorial searching, you'll be able to recognize the good from bad, the more info the better, watch several and with common sense you'll eventually find the people that say the same things, are probably the more accurate, although there are several methods.
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One when grafting one plant in to another they NEVER root into each other they FUSE. Two most roses are really hard to root because they are not wild roses they are hybrids and there rooting system is very bad.
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@tdbrady80: because Those roses are grafted themselves. you see, HTs (hybrid teas) the gift roses do not root well because they have really weak rooting systems, so they should always be grafted :L
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she doesnt know what shes doing
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grafting doesn't have anything with rooting
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fuck 30 second advertisements
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now i can steal stems from my favorite neibors roses
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Yeah yeah!
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be careful !! a spider is in that plant. watch carefully when she making cut on rose using her scissor :)
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it is called internode.
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Where is the finished multi rose plant ?
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You are right, she better stick to cooking instead of grafting.
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Use a graphing knife, with micropore tape (wal greens, CVS). Driving a pair of sheers into the stem damages a lot of ducts that carry nutrients up to the the top of the plant. For greater success, make clean cuts, let it breath. And by all means keep doing the closes ups, love your breasticles.
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This is the worst grafting video I have seen, the stem she was trying to graft wasn't. Even touching the canbian. Layer,bad,bad,bad, please show us the results.
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Good one going to try this>thanks anyway
3m 53sLength in seconds