Invest a little time in taking cuttings, and you can soon fill out your garden without needing to reach for your wallet, says Sally Petitt
The idea of free plants brings joy to many of us gardeners, including myself, but is there really such a thing? Yes!
You can produce new plants from your existing plantings without having to buy replacements. It will cost you in time and effort, of course, but in my opinion it’s well worth the investment!
Earlier this year, I wrote about the thrill of growing plants from seed. While some plants relish a spring sowing, other perennials and woody subjects benefit from autumnal sowing and exposure to winter cold to break seed dormancy.
But seed sowing isn’t the only propagation method. The vegetative propagation of plants – producing new plants from stems, roots or leaves, rather than seeds – will guarantee the production of an exact replica of the parent plant.
Taking softwood cuttings
Softwood cuttings are taken from the soft, new growth of plants – usually in spring or summer – and are one of the quickest ways to propagate tender perennials. Late summer is the perfect time to take softwood cuttings of tender perennials in your garden, such as pelargoniums, lavenders and salvias. Here at Cambridge University Botanic Garden, this process is well under way.
To produce softwood cuttings, you should gather non-flowering shoots from your garden plants, making a neat cut with a sharp knife below the node (leaf axil) at approximately 7-10cm down the stem, and inserting the cutting into a free-draining cutting compost. Your cuttings should be watered and placed either in a heated propagator or in a plastic bag on a windowsill, and the compost kept moist until roots develop.
Once roots are showing through the pot’s drainage holes and new growth has appeared, your new plants can be placed into small pots of general potting compost. I know my summer garden would be a much bleaker place if I didn’t refresh my tender plants such as Abutilon ‘Red Tiger’ and Pelargonium tomentosum with young, new plants grown from softwood cuttings every year and, to be honest, growing plants from cuttings is one of the most satisfying gardening tasks.
Taking hardwood cuttings
Hardwood cuttings come from older, woody stems once the plant is dormant. Autumn is a good time to start taking hardwood cuttings of deciduous climbers, trees and shrubs. This can continue from mid-autumn to late winter, while the plants are dormant. This treatment is perfect for plants including buddleia, forsythia, roses and dogwoods, and a great way to increase numbers of your woody favourites.
Taking a healthy stem of the previous year’s growth – typically wood that grew during the last growing season which has turned firm and woody – look for stems that are leafless, brown rather than green and slightly thicker than newer shoots. These should be cut into sections 15-30cm in length, making a clean cut at an angle above a bud and a cut straight across the lower section of stem below either a single bud or a pair of buds.
If you’re going into mass production, your hardwood cuttings can be inserted into a trench in the open garden. But on a domestic scale, a deep flowerpot containing a 50:50 mix of grit and multi-purpose compost will do the job nicely. The bottom two-thirds of the cutting (ie the section with the straight cut) should be immersed into the soil, with the angled cut exposed above the surface of the compost.
Cuttings should be kept moist until the following autumn, when they will have developed healthy roots and are showing signs of new growth. At this stage, your cuttings can be potted up and grown on until large enough for planting.
So, yes, you can get plants for free, produced from your own garden. It’s not too late to have a go at softwood cuttings, and there’s still plenty of time to take hardwood ones too.
If successful, you’ll reduce the money spent at the garden centre, you can admire your efforts for years to come and there’s the added thrill of sharing surplus with gardening friends. If you should happen to fail, you can always try again next year!
Gardening jobs for September
- Sow hardy annuals such as cornflowers directly in your garden.
- Collect ripe seeds from your favourite annuals and save in a dry place until spring, ready for sowing.
- Lift and divide congested perennials to remove old growth and encourage increased flowering.
- Plant new perennials while the soil is still warm and moisture levels are increasing to encourage stronger root development before next summer.
- Make direct sowings of broad beans and peas for a spring harvest.
- Plant spring flowering bulbs such as crocuses and daffodils.
Best for beginners
Top five plants for hardwood cuttings that root reliably
- Forsythia: bright, sunny-yellow spring blooms.
- Dogwood (Cornus): striking winter colour stems.
- Buddleia: loved by pollinators.
- Roses: beautiful and fragrant.
- Hydrangea: late-summer colour with large flower heads.
Top tips for hardwood cuttings
- Ensure you use a sharp knife to make a clean cut and minimise infection.
- Cut onto a durable surface, rather than cutting up towards your hand, but keep some plasters nearby just in case of any slips!
- Use a hormone rooting powder to protect exposed surfaces from infection and encourage quick root development.
- Keep pots of hardwood cuttings in a sheltered location, either tucked away in the rain shadow of a house or shed, or in a cold frame.
- Resist checking your cuttings for root growth – once they’ve got good roots you’ll see new leaves and shoots developing.
Sally Petitt is head of horticulture at Cambridge University Botanic Garden. From gardens for the senses to beds of roses, explore more of Sally’s gardening tips.




