Valley Journal Advertiser

Multiplyin­g wealth in the garden

This is the best time of the year to make the most of existing plants, shrubs

- MARK & BEN CULLEN markcullen.com @markcullen­gardening Mark Cullen is an expert gardener, author, broadcaste­r, tree advocate and Member of the Order of Canada. His son, Ben, is a fourth-generation urban gardener and graduate of University of Guelph and Dal

It’s RRSP season and time to think of how to invest for the new year.

Looked at from an investment point of view, the wealth you possess in plant material is indeed capable of miraculous returns that are sure to beat inflation.

Here are five ways you can multiply your plant wealth.

1. Seeds:

These are Mother Nature’s preferred methods for multiplyin­g her bounty and favoured by conservati­onists because sowing open pollinated seeds helps promote the greatest genetic biodiversi­ty in your garden. Now is a good time to start thinking about and ordering seeds for annuals and tender perennials. Biennial and perennial seeds can be sown in May or June and collected now from any seed heads you might

winter. have left standing for the Shrub and tree seeds can be germinated in April.

2. Layering:

Create a new plant from the mother plant. Layer shrubs, berries, vines and many tropical plants by partially burying a young branch of the plant beneath the soil. Score the bark where the branch contacts damp soil.

There, it will develop new roots. When the young branch is rooted, cut if free from the mother plant, remove it from soil — roots and all — and replant. Early spring is a good

viburnum time to layer shrubs like and forsythia or dig up suckers from raspberrie­s and common lilac. Mid-summer, layer strawberry runners and vines such as climbing hydrangea and Virginia creeper.

3. Division:

Mathematic­ians go crazy when we multiply by dividing. It is our garden, so we make up our own rules. Divide desirable plants by digging up your perennials, slice them into two or four pieces and replant the roots. Ornamental grasses prefer early spring division, as do perennial aster, rudbeckia, echinacea

and other native favourites. Wait until the soil is warm, in late May, to split your rhubarb and bulbous perennials such as daylilies and peonies.

4. Stem cuttings:

Now is a good time to take hardwood cuttings. Cut a 20- to 40-centimetre branch below a leaf node (where the leaf connects to the stem of the plant) using clean pruners straight across, making sure to take at least four leaf nodes. Strip all but two leaf nodes. Dip the cut end into rooting hormone and then plant two-thirds deep into a container of 50:50 coarse sand and damp compost. Maintain a damp soil mix for three to four weeks until roots form and the cutting is ready for transplant. Note, tree cuttings can be more difficult to propagate than shrubs so be patient and persistent. Growing in a cold frame or greenhouse will improve your odds of success.

5. Root cuttings:

These are best taken in early spring before lilies, phlox, peonies and iris break dormancy. Choose young roots about as thick as a pencil and cut them close to the crown or top of the root zone. Remove any fibrous roots and cut the end of the root section on an angle in five- to 10-centimetre lengths. Insert the cuttings into a 50:50 mix of coarse sand and compost so the flat end is just below the surface, water lightly and place into a cold frame. Later in the spring you can repot to grow throughout the summer for planting next spring.

We recommend that you take more cuttings and start more seeds than you think you can use as some (or many) may not meet expectatio­ns. If you have a bumper crop, it means more for your friends and neighbours. Starting early yields the best results, which is why this is the best time of year to multiply your garden riches. Chances are the percentage returns will be better than any RRSP.

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CONTRIBUTE­D greenhouse. Now is a good time of the year to start some seeds indoors or in a

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