Has anyone tried to use their flood and drain systems to propagate plants from cuttings?
The reason I ask is this:
Aside from fish... I'm obsessed with roses. I breed roses and have registerd and released a few of my own. In fact I am beginning to be 'head-hunted' by plant agents who want to represent me and commercially produce my seedlings. I own and run a board like this one called Rosetalk Australia (
http://www.rosetalkaustralia.com ). I'm the admin (Simon). Ideally I'd like to cut out the middle-man.
I've experimented with many ways to produce cutting grown roses and one of my main breeding goals is to breed roses that are healthy and don't need to be grafted onto a stronger rootstock that will grow happily on their own roots. Nearly all roses sold today are grafted. Cutting grown roses would drastically reduce production costs. Roses are generally sold as bare-root dormant plants during the winter making them ideal as mail order items. The problem is that if you grow them in the ground you are limited to where you can actually sell them due to each state having their own quarantine restrictions and requirements and the risk of transmitting soil-borne pathogens. This is fair enough too I reckon and my thinking is that AP might provide a way of producing plants that are easy to lift without much damage to their roots, that are free of soil borne pathogens and because they are gross feeders might also be useful in AP systems. Roses are also successfully grown hydroponically already so I see this as a logical extension.
One way I've grown rose cuttings successfully is to place them in orchid pots (perforated sides and bases) with straight perlite that has been thoroughly drenched then the pots are placed into plastic bags to maintain humidity until callousing begins and roots start to form. Then they are transplanted into pots to allow their roots to keep growing. The problem with this method is that fungus is a real problem inside the plastic bag and it takes up a lot of room. The success of this method lies in the humid air spaces between the perlite particles providing just the right climate for root development.
Another way I've had success is with a method called aeroponics. Basically what you do is cut a series of holes in the lid of a plastic tub full of water + rooting hormones and run a series of airstones into it so that the bubbles rise and burst at the surface creating a spray. The cuttings are placed in small perforated pots in rockwool with the ends stickig through the bottom and placed into the holes just above the water surface so that the spray from the bursting bubbles keeps them uniformly moist but not dripping wet. The sections above the lid are in the open air which reduces fungal issues. The combintion of air, water and hormones causes roots to grow really quickly though I've had just as much success without adding the rooting hormones into the water.
This is where an AP flood and drain system comes in. The system I currently have is a F&D system with autosiphons with gravel and clay media. I reckon that if I was to take rose cuttings and stick them straight into one of the four grow beds I could strike several hundred cuttings without too much trouble because it seems to have all the key ingredients for successful propagation; light, air, water, nutrients (but not too many as too many nutrients actually inhibits root formation), and during the spring and summer... warmth. The other three growbeds can grow my veggies as usual and then come winter I can lift the roses and pack them for sale.
Another question is... has anyone tried transplanting plants grown in AP systems into the garden? Are the roots that develop on AP grown plants more delicate than those of ground-grown plants reducing the transplant success?
Cheers,
Simon