Some will probably go in the ground and some in containers. We shall see. I have the field I've been clearing I could plant them in.Are you planning on putting these mulberries in ground...like all of them?
Just curious because so.e of them can potentially be massive trees.
I don't really have anything good enough for root stock currently. Jan is rooting some now and I don't mind gambling seeing if I can as well. I tried rooting Girardi Dwarf earlier this year and lost that battle. I'm hoping for good results with this latest batch. Both Pakistan and Australian Green will be the hardest to root.I heard the Australian green won't root on it's own. I would recommend you either graft it onto an existing tree or a cutting.
I was able to graft it onto a California white mulberry cutting around March. It's over a feet tall and pretty floppy. I need to stake it to keep it upright.
Graft onto one of your extra cuttings. Or if a cutting is long, cut it in half up use as a roostock.I don't really have anything good enough for root stock currently. Jan is rooting some now and I don't mind gambling seeing if I can as well. I tried rooting Girardi Dwarf earlier this year and lost that battle. I'm hoping for good results with this latest batch. Both Pakistan and Australian Green will be the hardest to root.