From: klier@iscsvax.uni.edu Subject: Re: Rose Propagation Question Date: 3 May 93 19:04:55 -0600 In article , ssgm@leia.nrl.navy.mil (Tom Dugan) writes: ... description of pepsi bottle greenhouse construction... > Take a very sharp knife or razor and cut off the top of the bottle > above the point where it begins to taper toward the neck. Invert and > push onto the bottle base. Nice little greenhouse, eh? A similar trick is to fill a clay pot with rooting medium (I use sand for most things) and sink the sand-filled clay pot inside a larger plastic pot. Jam long-strand sphagnum moss between the clay pot and the plastic pot. Water well. The sphagnum serves as a reservoir for water -- if you overwater, the sphagnum takes it up, and if you forget for a couple of days, the sphagnum releases water and keeps the rooting medium moist. Then cover the double-pot assemblage with a plastic bag to raise the humidity. In dry climates, I've just put the whole thing in a big bag, then blown up the bag and tied the top... in more humid climates, I just drape the plastic bag over some stakes that support the bag over the cuttings, leaving some "breathing spaces" so the assemblage doesn't change from a rooting chamber to a fungus factory... ;-) Kay Klier