Well my little town is lucky to have what they have, a cheese making store would be wonderful. Ok I'll check around , thanks !I found it through a quick search on cheesemaking.com
If you happen to have a cheesemaking supply store nearby, they should have it.
And of course, @2Angels carries it on their website (currently out of stock)
I have someone locally who is going to let me trim their trees in exchange for the cuttings. Just Brunswick and LSU purple( which I already have 40 of that I am growing out for rootstock to graft on to) so I’ll probably do a test run with some of those since I don’t need them and won’t be crushed if something happens to them.@FamilyPhishFigs I've had mold grow on cuttings under regular wax. Soy, being organically derived might be more prone to this than say, paraffin... but if you have a ton of it, I'd get some surplus cuttings and give it a try. At very least you know it's not toxic.
Wax warmers are definitely the way to go. Would hate to burn your house down over some fig cuttings lol.I use wax and works well. I was using a old metal cup and used old plain white candles unscented.. I heated it on the stove and learned a good lesson don’t do it lol almost burnt my house down.. it fought on fire.. so I just bought a wax warmer on Amazon for 11 bucks.. I do find using wax much easier than film..
I’ll probably get criticized for this but it worked for me, I used my Yankee Candle scented wax melts to seal the ends of my cuttings and they rooted just fine. It was the only wax I had. I think Nonno would have been proud of me.![]()
finally something to use my baby bell peels on
I think you’re right. I just rewatched it the other night.Betdempster, I saw the video you are referring to. I believe it was put out by Flomation Famous.
open cuts its better to not seal. lots of studies on it. let the tree heal itself. the exception is when youre rooting something cause it can dry outOther than wax. Does anyone use something like this or similar or open cuts on a tree when you prune?