Growing Tomatoes from Cuttings
My tomato from cutting |
Gardeners may be not familiar with started veggies from cuttings. The
tomato plant, in particular, lends itself easily to cutting propagation because
even the cells in its stems can become roots.
Starting tomato plants from cutting is not difficult. First time I did it
because I was late to prune my tomato suckers and feel sad to dispose it. Then
I started thinking about, how if grow another tomato plants from cuttings?
One of the advantages of propagating tomato plants by stem cuttings is
that it can take tomato seedlings (started from seed) 6 to 8 weeks before they
reach transplanting size. If you keep tomato cuttings warm, the transplanting
time frame is cut down to a mere 10 – 14 days.
Even if you’ve never tried propagating plants with cuttings before,
you’re practically guaranteed success. Tomato cuttings are such incredibly easy
rooters, they will even root in a cup of water. That being said, the plants are
stronger if they are rooted in soil.
What you’ll need:
-
Tomato cuttings about 6 inch long
-
New pots and soil with good drainage
-
A pencil
- First, you want to fill your 4 inch containers with the dampened potting soil.
- Take the 6 inch cuttings and clip off any flowers or buds. Clip off the bottom leaves leaving only two leaves on the cutting.
- Make a hole in the potting soil with the pencil–you don’t want to be trying to shove the soft stem into the soil.
- Put the cuttings into the soil and press the soil up around them. Make sure the places where you cut off the lower leaves is buried.
- Keep them in a warm place, but shaded form any direct sun. I prefer a kitchen window to protect them from the elements, but where ever they are protected is fine.
- Leave them moist and in this spot for about a week.
- You’ll then want to gradually expose them to stronger light until they are in the sun for most of the day. This may take another week.
- At this point you can transplant them into the garden bed or maybe a large pot, where they will continue to grow and produce some lovely tomatoes for you! This is the best time to give the baby tomato plants to friends so they can start them in their gardens right away.
Happy gardening!
Wonderful posting and information. I have never tried to take cuttings from tomatoes but I can see where it would be beneficial.Thank you for dropping by my blog and have a wonderful weekend.
ReplyDeleteThank you for dropping by my blog too. Growing tomatoes from cuttings have many advantages, one of them you don't have to wait to plant it from seeds.
Delete