Propagating a fuschia

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PeteXXX

Cake or ice cream? The choice is endless ...
Location
Hamtun
I know I can just take cuttings, but are these seed pods, and will anything grow from them?

IMG_3238.JPG


Is it the right time of year?

:rolleyes:
 
I think if the pods are soft they are ready.
I've never done this but I believe when you open the pods up you remove as much pulp as possible. Placing the seeds on a paper towel helps dry them. They can be planted straight away or kept dry and sown in the spring.
 

Dave 123

Legendary Member
@PeteXXX

Have a play with some leaf cuttings.

Get a small glass and fill to the brim.
Cover the top of the glass in cling film or silver foil.
Remove some leaves from plant with the full leaf stem.
Pierce a hole through foil/film.
Place leaf stem through hole and in to water.
Place glass in a light window but out of direct sun.
Keep water topped up.
Within a couple of weeks roots will start to appear, then a shoot will grow.
Once shoot is 1" long, pot it up into multi purpose compost in a 3" pot.
 
OP
OP
PeteXXX

PeteXXX

Cake or ice cream? The choice is endless ...
Location
Hamtun
@PeteXXX

Have a play with some leaf cuttings.

Get a small glass and fill to the brim.
Cover the top of the glass in cling film or silver foil.
Remove some leaves from plant with the full leaf stem.
Pierce a hole through foil/film.
Place leaf stem through hole and in to water.
Place glass in a light window but out of direct sun.
Keep water topped up.
Within a couple of weeks roots will start to appear, then a shoot will grow.
Once shoot is 1" long, pot it up into multi purpose compost in a 3" pot.
That sounds like a good thing for the grandkids to 'help' with!

Thanks for the idea.
 

PK99

Legendary Member
Location
SW19
seedlings won't come true to type.

Cuttings will.

iirc, heel cuttings in a jar of water till roots well formed.
 

Tin Pot

Guru
seedlings won't come true to type.

Cuttings will.

iirc, heel cuttings in a jar of water till roots well formed.

What does that mean? Surely planting the seeds is a good idea - it's what they're for after all.

(I was thinking of planting some berries from a bush to grow a new one)
 

MikeG

Guru
Location
Suffolk
What does that mean? Surely planting the seeds is a good idea - it's what they're for after all.......

It means that human cross-breeding (hybridisation) messes with the plants normal reproductive system, and so the seeds will likely produce "standard" (ie un-altered) versions of one of the original parent shrubs, rather than a copy of the off-spring (your shrub).
 

Tin Pot

Guru
It means that human cross-breeding (hybridisation) messes with the plants normal reproductive system, and so the seeds will likely produce "standard" (ie un-altered) versions of one of the original parent shrubs, rather than a copy of the off-spring (your shrub).
Oh.
 
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