PhilaGardener
Garden Addicted
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2014
- Messages
- 691
- Reaction score
- 741
- Points
- 257
- Location
- Gardening outside Philadelphia
Steve's rosemary plants look wonderful!Just had to say so! I can almost smell them from here! Ahhhhh!
For only a few cuttings, I have had good luck taking 4 inch long shoots, stripping off the lower leaves (save for the kitchen) and then simply standing them in a bottle of water in a sunny window. Try to get a little woodier stem at the base of your cutting - all soft green tissue tends to die off. They can be slow - several weeks to two months (depending on the season) - but they generally break roots at the bottom, at which point I transfer them to potting soil. A few fail to develop roots but I get a better than 50% success rate with this no-fuss approach.
I have more difficulty getting larger plants potted up from the garden through the winter indoors. Powdery mildew can be an issue, and the plants are sensitive to over- or under-watering.
Here in Philadelphia I have been able to get a ground planted rosemary bush through the last 3 winters outside with minimal protection. Last Fall it was 5 feet high! However, after the recent arctic vortex I am glad I have a few cuttings in the house as a back-up, because I am not sure that run will continue.
For only a few cuttings, I have had good luck taking 4 inch long shoots, stripping off the lower leaves (save for the kitchen) and then simply standing them in a bottle of water in a sunny window. Try to get a little woodier stem at the base of your cutting - all soft green tissue tends to die off. They can be slow - several weeks to two months (depending on the season) - but they generally break roots at the bottom, at which point I transfer them to potting soil. A few fail to develop roots but I get a better than 50% success rate with this no-fuss approach.
I have more difficulty getting larger plants potted up from the garden through the winter indoors. Powdery mildew can be an issue, and the plants are sensitive to over- or under-watering.
Here in Philadelphia I have been able to get a ground planted rosemary bush through the last 3 winters outside with minimal protection. Last Fall it was 5 feet high! However, after the recent arctic vortex I am glad I have a few cuttings in the house as a back-up, because I am not sure that run will continue.