think it would work for the same family of vegetables (solanacea), like
eggplant, chayote, tomatillo, but have you tried to see if this works for
say, peppers? From what I remember in Science class, the primary roots
develop at the nodes, as you say. I have propagated softwood shrubs with
scoring or scraping to expose a bit of the stem flesh and encourage roots
there, and also layering by pinning a branch down onto the soil with a rock
on top.
mass anya February 25, 2014
but have you tried to see if this works for say, peppers? From what I
remember in Science class, the primary roots develop at the nodes, as you
say. I have scoring or scraping to expose a bit of the stem flesh and
encourage roots there, and also layering
think it would work for the same family of vegetables (solanacea), like
eggplant, chayote, tomatillo, but have you tried to see if this works for
say, peppers? From what I remember in Science class, the primary roots
develop at the nodes, as you say. I have propagated softwood shrubs with
scoring or scraping to expose a bit of the stem flesh and encourage roots
there, and also layering by pinning a branch down onto the soil with a rock
on top.
but have you tried to see if this works for say, peppers? From what I
remember in Science class, the primary roots develop at the nodes, as you
say. I have scoring or scraping to expose a bit of the stem flesh and
encourage roots there, and also layering