I stopped disinfecting my cuttings, but 1-2 parts water to 1 part H202 is sufficient. The byproduct is water after a few hours in light anyway.What’s the ratio again for peroxide and water to disinfect the cuttings?
I'm offended with your disregard for Celeste =)I'm afraid to do that with any really good cuttings here, this clay tends to pool water...parts of my yard turn into small ponds.
I figured if I tried that it would rot the cuttings.
Might try some day with some Celeste.
Lol....I say Celeste because I have a big one in ground and plenty of good wood on it.I'm offended with your disregard for Celeste =)

View attachment 2813
I did a “modified” version of the old Italian man method back in May - I dug a trench under a shade tree, put my cuttings into 1 gallon grow bags with some potting soil, covered with straw and watered them all in.
I ended up with about 80% success rate, and honestly I think I’d have had 100% success except that rabbits and/or a groundhog that lives in my backyard thought that the new shoots were tasty morsels, so I lost a couple of the cuttings to chomping.
Overall, I think highly of the method and may try it again even over winter with a few cuttings even if not the ones I went out and purchased specifically
This is another reason why I I put the containers on top with the bricks. to keep the mulch in place and keep earths heat inside and the cold outside. The bricks to keep the wind from blowing the containers off and the critters out. They are well protected to take their time to root over winter. I Will have to be patient throughout winter till spring to see how they did.Every single cutting that I rooted inground this past Summer has been eaten down to the ground by rabbits over the last few weeks. Tis the season.
Teresa, if you have them, pile 4-6” of mulch or wood chips around the buckets for extra heat retention. You can always spread around in the spring.This is another reason why I I put the containers on top with the bricks. to keep the mulch in place and keep earths heat inside and the cold outside. The bricks to keep the wind from blowing the containers off and the critters out. They are well protected to take their time to root over winter. I Will have to be patient throughout winter till spring to see how they did.
That’s a great idea. Will do tomorrow. Thanks so very much.Teresa, if you have them, pile 4-6” of mulch or wood chips around the buckets for extra heat retention. You can always spread around in the spring.
I like this grow bags in ground idea. I'm thinking you do this because you want to pull out the cutting once it roots? I'd like to try your idea in a raised bed (because the native soil is dense clay).View attachment 2813
I did a “modified” version of the old Italian man method back in May - I dug a trench under a shade tree, put my cuttings into 1 gallon grow bags with some potting soil, covered with straw and watered them all in.
I ended up with about 80% success rate, and honestly I think I’d have had 100% success except that rabbits and/or a groundhog that lives in my backyard thought that the new shoots were tasty morsels, so I lost a couple of the cuttings to chomping.
Overall, I think highly of the method and may try it again even over winter with a few cuttings even if not the ones I went out and purchased specifically
Was it MC?I once hammered cuttings into the ground and they all grew. Yours stand a good chance.
EVERYONE should have more than one!I'm offended with your disregard for Celeste =)
I do. Love my celeste.EVERYONE should have more than one!
Me too. There’s a good reason it’s everywhere in the southeast.I do. Love my celeste.