The Complete
Book of Plant Propagation
Demystifying The Essential Art of Plant Propagation
By Clive Innes,
Jim Arbury, Mike Hanour, Mike Salmon, Richard Bell
How can you rejuvenate plants
or safeguard against winter frosts? Or multiply
favorite plants to pass to friends? For every plant
there is a successful technique -- from root and
stem cuttings, to bulbils and spores.
The Complete Book of Plant
Propagation shows you the best ways to do these
tasks and more. It is the essential guide to
improving and enlivening your garden, demystifying
the essential art of propagating plants and
demonstrating a simple and useful technique that is
integral to good gardening practice.
In this book you'll find:
- A unique plant-led
approach that leaves you with no doubt as to
which technique is best suited to the plant you
want to propagate
- Color photographs and
easy-to-follow, step-by-step drawings of the
major techniques
- Authoritative advice on
over 500 plants as well as full details of every
propagation technique
- Just how satisfying
propagating your own plants can be
Introduction:
The art of propagation is one
that is often shrouded by mystique. While it is
undoubtedly true that some gardeners have "green
fingers" and appear to increase their garden stock
effortlessly -- it is more often the case that the
apparently green-fingered gardener merely has a good
grasp of the basic principles involved and has
practiced the necessary skills.
The main theme of this book is
the elucidation of these basic principles, and each
chapter deals with the way they can be modified to
suit the needs of various plant groups, whether they
be the simplest of annuals grown from seed or more
horticulturally developed plants -- like apples and
pears -- that we cultivate as grafted trees in our
gardens.
One of the first principles is
to identify the nature of the plant material that
you wish to propagate, for this usually dictates the
frequency of propagation and gives guidance
regarding the sorts of techniques that may be
appropriate. Plants may be short-lived and
ephemeral, like annuals and biennials, thus needing
annual propagation. Or they may be, to all intents
and purposes, permanent garden features, as are many
trees and shrubs, which need propagating only once
or twice during the life of the garden. A plant may
be a herbaceous clump-former that lends itself
ideally to division, or it may be woody and amenable
to increase by a variety of different sorts of
cuttings.
A plant's hardiness also gives
clues to a suitable propagation environment: a plant
that tolerates winter lows of 5 degrees Fahrenheit
and below is likely to germinate, root and grow at
lower temperatures than one that will not tolerate
temperatures below freezing, or one that needs
temperatures well above 32 degrees Fahrenheit to
thrive. In the chapter on annuals and biennials and
the chapter on herbs, plants are listed as being
either hardy or half hardy. A hardy plant is one
that will tolerate temperatures around 32 degrees
Fahrenheit without protection, and half hardy plants
are those that will do so but with some protection.
Some principles are immutable
and apply across the whole range of propagating
techniques and material -- good hygiend and
appropriate environmental conditions for rooting and
growth, for example, are fundamental to success.
Others, like the timing of taking cuttings, are
variable, and success relies on following expert
advice and applying one's own increasing experience.
It is nearly always true that
there is more than one way to achieve a successful
outcome, and where one method fails, another will
surely succeed. Half of the satisfaction of
gardening is learning skills and applying them to
the diverse plants that we grow in our gardens. It
is, after all, the willingness to experiment and to
learn from both successes and failures that is one
of the marks of a good gardener.
Table of Contents:
Foreword
1 ANNUALS AND BIENNIALS
2 HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS
3 FERNS
4 BULBS, CORMS, AND TUBERS
5 ALPINES AND ROCK GARDEN PLANTS
6 CONIFERS AND HEATHERS
7 SHRUBS, TREES, AND CLIMBERS
8 HOUSEPLANTS
9 WATER, PLANTS
10 HERBS
11 FRUIT
12 VEGETABLES
Seed Botany and Hybridizing
Propagating Media
Propagation by Season
Pests and Diseases
Glossary
Index
Hard-cover,
7-3/4 x 10-1/2 in., 224 pages, with
color
photos and drawings
Published 1990
ISBN: 978-1-56158-234-1
The Complete Book
Of Plant Propagation
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