Rooting process, step 1

DEIO

Active member
Hello Fig Fanatics! I have been rooting cuttings in empty fast-food cups and I recently bought a MUFGA hydroponics system to process cuttings. Here are some new cuttings from the Thanksgiving Cuttings Giveaway and some I bought. This is step 1 of my rooting process. I'm looking forward to reporting on my progress.
 

Attachments

  • Mufga.jpg
    Mufga.jpg
    156.3 KB · Views: 37
Hello Fig Fanatics! I have been rooting cuttings in empty fast-food cups and I recently bought a MUFGA hydroponics system to process cuttings. Here are some new cuttings from the Thanksgiving Cuttings Giveaway and some I bought. This is step 1 of my rooting process. I'm looking forward to reporting on my progress.
Good luck. Your setup looks great.
 
Hello Fig Fanatics! I have been rooting cuttings in empty fast-food cups and I recently bought a MUFGA hydroponics system to process cuttings. Here are some new cuttings from the Thanksgiving Cuttings Giveaway and some I bought. This is step 1 of my rooting process. I'm looking forward to reporting on my progress.
I do that too. My favorite one is the medium size McDonalds milk shake cup. 😉
 
The cuttings were put into the hydroponics system this past Friday 12/5/25. I did not use root hormone and did not scrape the cuttings at the bottom.

The directions on the plant food were unclear to me. Instead of mixing the plant food with water and then measuring out the liquid to add to the water tank, I mixed the whole bottle of plant food "A" with a gallon of water and the whole bottle of plant food "B" with a gallon of water and then mixed them together to reach the 6.5 liter capacity of the machine. It ended up being way more plant food than it was supposed to be. Hopefully, it supercharges their growth and not overfeeds them to death.

Aside from that mishap, I am loving the Mufga. It is totally quiet when the pump is not active, and when the pump is active, you hear faint water sounds like a small, relaxing fountain. I have found that the little white baskets/cups don't lock perfectly flat, but it is not problematic.

I've also discovered that those baskets hold small to medium cuttings well, but the narrowing of the baskets at the bottom are a tighter fit for the log cuttings I like. Like Ben from the Eretabe Gardens youtube channel, I was planning to cut some of the basket sides anyway to accommodate the large rootballs that I plan to grow. His channel is where I first learned about the MUFGA system. Then I went and bought myself two and I'm about to buy one for my mother too.
 
Last edited:
I haven't gotten into growing figs from seed. I assumed that fruiting would be faster from cuttings.
I like the jello and pudding cups for starting my vegetable seeds. Unless the fig was pollinated by hand or fig wasp the seed will grow grow a tree with beautiful leaves but never grow figs. That’s what I was told.
 
  • Wow
Reactions: SDO
Hello Fig Fanatics! I have been rooting cuttings in empty fast-food cups and I recently bought a MUFGA hydroponics system to process cuttings. Here are some new cuttings from the Thanksgiving Cuttings Giveaway and some I bought. This is step 1 of my rooting process. I'm looking forward to reporting on

Hello Fig Fanatics! I have been rooting cuttings in empty fast-food cups and I recently bought a MUFGA hydroponics system to process cuttings. Here are some new cuttings from the Thanksgiving Cuttings Giveaway and some I bought. This is step 1 of my rooting process. I'm looking forward to reporting on my progress.
Just remember if they start to root like crazy , you still have to get them out of those small holes
 
Just remember if they start to root like crazy , you still have to get them out of those small holes
True. The plan is to cut some of the side of the basket to make a bigger hole to remove roots and also to allow it to accommodate log cuttings more easily.
 
You can make yourself a 5 gal bucket cloner for under $50. You'll need:
Bucket/lid
Small pump
Clone collers
 

Attachments

  • 17653325348108761463734329218728.jpg
    17653325348108761463734329218728.jpg
    106.4 KB · Views: 2
  • 17653325943109189051606334319579.jpg
    17653325943109189051606334319579.jpg
    116.9 KB · Views: 2
  • 17653326591487005063115822405350.jpg
    17653326591487005063115822405350.jpg
    75.4 KB · Views: 1
Back
Top