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| The Herb Bed Help, Tips & Advice about Growing your own Herbs. |
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I would save some for yourself Kirsty as I don't know how well it will regrow after you prune it back ( bit like lavender)
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ntg ![]() Never be afraid to try something new. Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic http://grief-encounters.blogspot.com/ ==================================================
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I agree Snadger,
I have a small rosemary from my MIL that was a heel cutting, and 'liberated' some lavender cuttings from our local park (well I OH is on the cttee) which are doing well. The only thing I know really is that there used to be huge lavender near here, and it grew beautifully until some new people moved in and 'pruned it back'. You should never cut the hard wood as it will not survive.
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Regards, Jane What sane person could live in this world and not be crazy? The creative adult is the child who has survived. Ursula LeGuin http://www.etribes.com/madderbat |
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I was planning on keeping the plant and just lightly trimming it into shape, and was not planning on cutting the older wood and then potting any trimmings to see if they took root.
I didn't explain myself properly in my first post, but glad I waited to see what advice I got before I started! Thanks Kirsty Last edited by kirsty b : 16-01-2007 at 09:11 PM. |
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Quote:
Good luck.
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Regards, Jane What sane person could live in this world and not be crazy? The creative adult is the child who has survived. Ursula LeGuin http://www.etribes.com/madderbat |
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I've never dipped rosemary cuttings in rooting powder just cut, remove some leaves and straight into compost. Never fails.
I agree about the cutting back to hardwood, always ensure there is evidence of a leaf bud or small sprig. We cut the dentata back very hard after the heavy frosts last year and it is back to the same size as before. I've never pruned the rosemary. I've tried to cut it into shape a number of times but it still grows haywire just like the bay that I've also tried to cut into shape regularly. Bayleaves anyone ![]() Time it right though as you don't want the new cuts to get frostbitten.
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Bright Blessings Earthbabe If at first you don't succeed, open a bottle of wine. |
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of course..... Nobody knows how my Rosemary grows
... er i'll get me coat then ![]() |
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Hi, Due to the gusty weather of late a large-ish rosemary shrub has come my way (about 1 ft high and wide) that has been untimely ripped from its roots.
The result is a plant with a thick (1 inch) stem but no roots. I gather that simply planting it in the ground would not cause the roots to regrow and I may have to do lots of cuttings from the branches to plant as individuals. Any ideas, other than lamb for the next month! |
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Rosemary jelly, rosemary sauce (like mint), great with chicken with garlic and lemon.
Rosemary in bread, Foccacia, ciabatta. Its good with duck and pork too. Try some things and let us know what you get.
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Bright Blessings Earthbabe If at first you don't succeed, open a bottle of wine. |
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I have never succeeded with softwood cuttings from Rosemary like I have done with lavender and sage, so will try heel cuttings. Did use hormone powder on them but they rotted anyway. Read somewhere that you don't need it for most hardy herbs.
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I don't use it, just make sure you keep the time between cutting and putting in compost as short as poss and pull the bottom leaves away. Rosemary etc are the only cuttings I've ever had success with.
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Bright Blessings Earthbabe If at first you don't succeed, open a bottle of wine. |
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