social

Starting a Weeping Willow Tree from a Cutting

August 28, 2012
Growing a Willow From a Cutting

Question:

Can someone please tell me how to take a cutting from a willow tree and how to get the cutting to grow? I live in CT.

GRAYCAT926 from Bolton, CT

Advertisement

Answer:

GRAYCAT926,

Willow cuttings root easily because the tissues contain a natural root-promoting hormone. They can be started any time of the year in pots, or outside in late winter or early spring.

To start a tree from a cutting, select a healthy branch that is approximately 1/2 inch to 1 inch in diameter, and about 10-15 inches long. If planting outside in the spring, pound the branch into moist soil with a rubber mallet, leaving two or three leaf nodes exposed above ground. The site should receive at least a small amount of shade during the day to allow the roots to develop properly. Roots will start to form within a few weeks, and by fall the cutting can be carefully transplanted to a permanent site-ideally as far away as possible from foundations, water pipes and sewer lines.

To root a cutting indoors, simply stick the branch in a small pot of moist soil and transplant it outside as soon as the danger of frost has passed.

Advertisement

Good luck.

Ellen

Read More Comments

More Solutions

This page contains the following solutions.

August 28, 2012

How do you start new trees from an existing Weeping Willow tree?

 
Read More...

21 Questions

Here are the questions asked by community members. Read on to see the answers provided by the ThriftyFun community.

July 24, 2011

My daughter had to cut down her weeping willow after it was destroyed in a storm. We noticed that the cut logs and branches were starting to sprout. Can a new tree be started from these and, if so, how?

By Kate

Answers

July 29, 20112 found this helpful
Best Answer

You can just cut off one of the shoots and put it in water, or plant it, but it must be kept pretty damp till it takes root. It will grow with no problem. We have done this several times, they are pretty easy to get going. Good luck.

 
Answer this Question

October 12, 2009

How do I start a willow tree?

Hardiness Zone: 6a

By Carol Burich from Pittsburgh, PA

Answers

October 14, 20091 found this helpful
Best Answer

All you have to do is put the cut end in water and change it every 2 or 3 days, be sure there is room between the twigs so don't crowd them in a glass or jar.

Advertisement

Rinse the stem ends when you change the water but stop rinsing them once you see roots, just carefully flood the jar with warm water until it is clear again, once roots start appearing simply pot them up and try to keep them in a warm area, they grow like crazy so be prepared! Corkscrew willows can be kept in a pot for many years and make beautiful trees.

 
Answer this Question

June 22, 2011

Can I clip a piece of my downed willow and make a new willow?

By Lee

Answers

June 28, 20110 found this helpful
Best Answer

Willows root pretty easily and you shouldn't even need any rooting hormone (many of these compounds are made from willow anyway). If the tree has been down for a short time, you should have no trouble rooting it as the stems will still be live for a period after it has fallen. If the tree fell due to disease, I would not root cuttings as that could be transfered to the new trees.

Advertisement

Take a cutting from new wood on the willow, about 8" long (new wood is a term for that season's growth). Leave only 2-3 leaves on it at the tip. At the base of the cutting, gently scrape off some bark on two sides of the stem. This will help roots to grow from that area.

Place the stem in a 4"-6" pot with moistened potting soil. I like to use a potting mix that is for seed starting. Cover the pot with a plastic bag to keep the humidity high. Place the covered pot in a partly sunny location (morning sun is best). Check the soil daily to see if it needs watering. Spray the soil with water as needed and put the bag back on the pot.

After 4-8 weeks, roots should begin to grow. You can check the drainage hole on the bottom to see if you see any roots growing or gently pull on the stem to see if you feel any resistance. If you do, then roots have started growing. Once you know roots are growing, removing the bag and continue to grow it in the pot until roots have filled up the pot. Transplant to a larger pot to grow for another year or so, before putting in the ground. I'd suggest taking more than one cutting in case some don't take root.

Advertisement

I also have another method you could try, but not sure if it will work in your situation. You can use a technique called layering. Simply take a stem, nick the stem with a knife and then bury the wound under soil while the stem is still attached to the tree. After 6-8 weeks you can cut the stem from the mother plant and dig up the cutting with new roots attached. You can usually have a larger plant this way as the stem is still getting support from the mother plant as the new tree is growing roots of it's own. Works great for all kinds of bushes too.

 
Answer this Question

June 26, 2011

Can I plant a branch from a weeping willow? Should I use root hormone on it?

By Eileen

Answers

July 5, 20110 found this helpful
Best Answer

I would say definitely on the root hormone. I know that you can root the curly willows in water first. It should not be hard either way. It is almost impossible to kill those darn things!

 
Answer this Question

May 8, 2011

How do you grow roots on a weeping willow cutting?

By Nick J.

Answers

May 16, 20110 found this helpful
Best Answer

My friend simply cuts a good sized stem and puts in in the ground while the leaves are still coming out. After that time, I would normally put the stem into a container of water until roots showed up.

Advertisement

Willow has a natural affinity to 'root', in fact, you can boil willow plant, and use the cooled water to root other plants, by dipping the stem into the water, then placing in dirt.

 
Answer this Question

November 8, 2010

I have taken some cuttings from a large weeping willow at the end of our road. They are now well rooted and I was just wondering if these will grow into mature weeping willow trees?

By Steve

Answers

November 8, 20100 found this helpful
Best Answer

Yes, so be sure to give them lots of room to grow!

 
Answer this Question

May 25, 2013

I have a weeping willow tree in my back yard. I would like to know how to prune and start another tree with my pruning

By David

Answers

May 25, 20130 found this helpful

I found these actually on this site:

www.thriftyfun.com/.../Starting-a-Weeping-Willow-Tree-from...

I might actually try this myself!

 
Answer this Question

January 28, 2013

Willow cuttings in a container.I received some weeping willow twigs in the mail. I've already planted them in a small pot. They're about a foot long. They are "not" branches. They are much smaller and thinner than a branch. I've had them for about 2 weeks and the willow buds are starting to sprout leaves. I've noticed that they grow more and more each day. And they seem to grow faster if I water them faster.

My question is, now that they're starting to sprout, will they grow together as one tree? Or will each sprouting twig become its own tree? Also, is it possible to take the willow twigs and entwine them together so when the weeping willow tree grows, the trunk will be braided?

I've tried looking all over online, and I can't find a legitimate answer. The only related searches are about pruning, watering, etc. I know all of this, I just want to know if each twig will be an individual tree.

Thank you so much for your help ((:

By Donna R

Answers

February 4, 20130 found this helpful

Each cutting is an individual tree, if planted in 1 clump you will have a clump of willow trees. Please check with your county extension office for more information on growing your willows, if they can be braided and any other questions you may have. I do hope this helps.

 
Answer this Question

Archives

ThriftyFun is one of the longest running frugal living communities on the Internet. These are archives of older discussions.

November 8, 2010

Is it ok to start a weeping willow cutting in the fall?

 
Read More...

September 8, 2010

How do I propagate cuttings of the weeping willow?

 
Read More...

January 31, 2008

On Valentine's Day 2007, I received some roses with beautiful greenery! On of the pieces of greenery was a Curly Willow branch which is growing it's leaves.

 
Read More...
Load More
Categories
Home and Garden Gardening CuttingsMarch 28, 2012
Pages
More
👒
Mother's Day Ideas!
🐛
Pest Control
🌻
Gardening
Facebook
Pinterest
YouTube
Instagram
Categories
Better LivingBudget & FinanceBusiness and LegalComputersConsumer AdviceCoronavirusCraftsEducationEntertainmentFood and RecipesHealth & BeautyHolidays and PartiesHome and GardenMake Your OwnOrganizingParentingPetsPhotosTravel and RecreationWeddings
Published by ThriftyFun.
Desktop Page | View Mobile
Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Contact Us
Generated 2024-04-07 06:24:29 in 7 secs. ⛅️️
© 1997-2024 by Cumuli, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
https://www.thriftyfun.com/tf/Gardening/Cuttings/Starting-a-Weeping-Willow-Tree-from-a-Cutting.html