IN THE PAST FEW WEEKS I HAVE BEEN TAKING CUTTINGS AND PLACING THEM IN SPHAGNUM MOSS. IN THIS VIDEO WE GET TO SEE WHAT HAPPENED TO THEM, AND HOW THEY ARE TRANSPLANTED INTO SEPARATE POTS. WE ALSO SEE WHAT HAPPENED TO THE YELLOW BAMBOO CUTTINGS THAT I TOOK IN HOPE OF MAKING A FOREST OF YELLOW BAMBOO.(***PLEASE VIEW PART 12 ABOUT THE WARNING ON HANDLING SPHAGNUM MOSS BEFORE YOU WORK WITH SPHAGNUM MOSS***).
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This guy must be joking. Totally unsophisticated…..crude….no elegance at all to either the demonstrator or his plants.
why do you say that?
The sphagnum moss you use looks fresh or alive. Where do you get your moss? I’m thinking that the spag moss bought in bags at box stores won’t work. Is that correct?
Nice plants.
this is a joke right???!!!
try the bambo cutings in a cup water in a window instead of moss and after they grow alot of roots then put them in the moss
so all your cutings go into soil until they get a root system going then you move them to the moss?
Hi,
That is not true, as per my personal experience. I have had many bonsai cuttings grow from simple rootless cuttings. The running style of bamboss seem to do the best for me. I will try some more when I get the chance.
The reason the bamboo cuttings did not survive is the simple fact that you can NOT grow new bamboo from cuttings. The only way to propagate them is division of the roots.