One thing that has puzzled me

Discussion in 'General Gardening Discussion' started by Jiffy, Apr 20, 2012.

  1. Jiffy

    Jiffy The Match is on Fire

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    Taking cuttings, put one into water (just water) and it grows roots and lives
    put another into compost and to much water and it dies ie waterlogged ???

    My question is Why
     
  2. Evil Len

    Evil Len Nag a ram

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    Voodoo

    Hope that helps ...
     
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    • NEIL CHESTOCK

      NEIL CHESTOCK Apprentice Gardener

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    • westwales

      westwales Gardener

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      Roots need to develop root hairs to take water from soil and so although the water is there it isn't as accessible to the plant in the soil
       
    • willow

      willow Naughty Gardener

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      That is a puzzle. Maybe a hydroponics book would give a reason, i'm thinking it may have something to do with available oxygen? Perhaps there is more available in water than sodden soil? Maybe soil microbes absorb it then anerobic bacteria attact the roots?
       
    • JWK

      JWK Gardener Staff Member

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      Well it's because there are so many different types of plants all adapted to different environments, so plants that grow on the margins of water obviously have adapated their roots to cope with being waterlogged, many other plants would die in this situation. You might say the same about why some plants thrive in acid soil whilst others hate it, etc, etc.
       
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      • clueless1

        clueless1 member... yep, that's what I am:)

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        With the exception of Willow cuttings (which don't count because they just grow anyway) I have very little luck with cuttings.

        I've tried numerous times with numerous species to do it by the book, and had no look. I've also tried several times with several different species going against the accepted way, usually sticking the cuttings in compost which I've deliberately kept waterlogged, and they have sometimes worked. Certainly its worked more times than when I do it by the book, so the whole thing is a puzzle to me too.
         
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        • JWK

          JWK Gardener Staff Member

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          When I first moved into this current garden I tried to make a new hedge as cheaply as possible, I took conifer cuttings from our front hedge and put them into a carefully prepared trench. To stop the wind blowing them about I got some old dead twigs and tied each cutting to the twig. Over the next few weeks the green conifer cuttings died and the 'dead' support twigs sprouted into a nice new hedge. Not exactly what I had planned but at least I got a cheap hedge.
           
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          • Jiffy

            Jiffy The Match is on Fire

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            Thank you for all the replys

            Looks it's voo doo then

            Some live, some die
             
          • Hex_2011

            Hex_2011 Gardener

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            Very likely there will some movement in the water however small (thermal current,windage etc) which will aid gas exchange at the surface. You wont get that in waterlogged soil.

            westwales, taproots are generally associated with water. Root hairs are the quickest and most economical method for a plant to increase its root area.
             
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