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Air Layering — Rooting a Branch While It Stays on the Tree
Root a branch in mid-air, while it is still attached to and fed by the parent plant — so it can never wilt or starve the way a cut-off cutting can. Girdle a ring of bark, wrap the wound in moist moss sealed in plastic, wait for roots to fill it, then cut off a ready-made new plant. A serious maker build in the girdle and why layering roots the plants that cuttings can't.
중급
A few weeks to a few months
안내
1
1
Roots in mid-air
Roots in mid-air
Air layering makes a branch grow roots while it is STILL joined to the parent plant. Because the branch stays attached, the parent keeps watering and feeding it the whole time it roots — so it cannot dry out or starve. Once roots have formed up in the air, you cut the branch off as a fully-rooted new plant.
2
2
Choose a healthy stem
Choose a healthy stem
Pick a healthy branch about pencil-to-finger thick, and a smooth section of it a hand's length back from the tip, just below a node. This works for many woody plants that are stubborn from cuttings — ficus, magnolia, citrus, rubber plant, croton, many shrubs.
3
3
Girdle the bark
Girdle the bark
Cut two rings around the stem about 2-3 cm apart and peel off the bark between them, then scrape the slippery green cambium off the bared wood so the bark cannot heal back over. This girdle is the trick: it blocks the food and rooting hormone travelling DOWN the bark, so they pool at the upper edge of the wound — exactly where you want roots.
필요한 도구:
Sharp Pruning Knife4
4
Dust with rooting hormone (optional)
Dust with rooting hormone (optional)
Optional: brush a little rooting hormone, or willow-water soaked from young willow twigs, onto the upper cut edge to speed rooting. The plant already concentrates its own auxin here; this just adds more.
이 단계의 재료:
Willow Withies (Flexible)1 묶음5
5
Wrap in moist moss
Wrap in moist moss
Take a fat handful of sphagnum or peat moss, soak it and wring it out so it is damp but not dripping, and pack it in a ball completely around the girdled section. The moss is the airy, ever-moist bed the new roots will grow into.
이 단계의 재료:
Peat Moss1 bag6
6
Seal it in plastic
Seal it in plastic
Wrap the moss ball tightly in clear plastic film and tie it firmly at the top AND bottom so it seals in the moisture — a little greenhouse around the wound. A layer of foil over the top keeps it cool and shaded. Check now and then and re-wet the moss if it dries.
이 단계의 재료:
Plastic Wrap1 롤
Garden Twine1 롤7
7
Sever and pot up
Sever and pot up
In a few weeks to a few months you'll see roots filling the moss through the plastic. Once it is well rooted, cut the branch off just BELOW the new root ball, unwrap the plastic (leave the moss), pot it up, and keep it humid and shaded while it learns to support itself on its own new roots.
이 단계의 재료:
Adhesive Labels1 장8
8
Compendium — the girdle and the attached clone
Compendium — the girdle and the attached clone
Air layering is a clever fix for the one weakness of cuttings. A detached cutting has no roots and no supply line, so it races to grow roots before it wilts or starves — and for tough woody plants it often loses that race. Layering removes the deadline entirely by rooting the branch WHILE it is still plumbed into the parent: water keeps rising, food keeps arriving, so the branch stays alive and comfortable for as long as it needs to root. The girdle is where the biology sings. A stem has two transport layers: the XYLEM, deep in the wood, carries water UP from the roots; the PHLOEM, in the soft inner bark, carries sugars and hormones DOWN from the leaves. Cutting a ring of bark severs the phloem but leaves the xylem in the wood untouched — so water still flows up and the branch above stays turgid and fed by its own leaves, but the sugars and the rooting hormone (auxin) streaming down from those leaves hit the girdle and can go no further, so they PILE UP at the top lip of the wound. That rich, hormone-loaded, well-watered spot, wrapped in constantly-moist moss, is the perfect cradle for roots — and roots duly burst from it. Like a cutting, division or graft, the result is a genetic CLONE of the parent, but air layering hands you a big, already-substantial new plant far faster than a cutting could grow one. It belongs to the LAYERING family: its simpler cousin, ground layering, just bends a low branch down and buries a section until it roots, then severs it — air layering does the same job up in the air for branches that will never reach the soil. Perfected in China (where it is called marcotting or 'gootee') well over a thousand years ago, it is the gardener's surest way to clone a difficult tree.
재료
5- 플레이스홀더
- 1 롤플레이스홀더
- 1 롤플레이스홀더
- 플레이스홀더
필요 도구
1- 플레이스홀더
You can swap these in
Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.
- Instead of Adhesive Labels, try:
Adhesive Seal Labels - Instead of Garden Twine, try:
Binding Twine
Cotton Twine (for bundling)
Jute Twine - Instead of Sharp Pruning Knife, try:
Blunt Collection Knife
Gilder's Knife
Knife
Sharp Cinnamon Knife
Sharp Knife (faca)
Small Trimming Knife
Sharp Knife - Instead of Plastic Wrap, try:
Plastic Sheet
관련 블루프린트
이 블루프린트들은 지식을 공유합니다 — 기술, 재료 또는 원리
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