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Old June 9, 2016   #16
Stvrob
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I always thought bay leaves used for cooking were those from the sweetbay magnolia that is widespread in swamps in the SE US. Apparently that's a different plant altogether.
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Old June 9, 2016   #17
Worth1
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Stvrob View Post
I always thought bay leaves used for cooking were those from the sweetbay magnolia that is widespread in swamps in the SE US. Apparently that's a different plant altogether.

I just read a little bit about the so called Laurel forest and the habitat of the Bay trees.
Very interesting.
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Old June 9, 2016   #18
Tracydr
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I had no idea that I live in a laurel forest!
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Old June 9, 2016   #19
Worth1
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I had no idea that I live in a laurel forest!
I was hoping you would see that.

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Old July 21, 2016   #20
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I brought mine inside last fall and it survived until I put it outside too early in the spring. Picked up a new one from Terra Greenhouses because we like using the bay leaves in cooking. A day or two on the counter is recommended before using.
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Old July 22, 2016   #21
NewWestGardener
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Anybody successful in propagating cuttings? I pot up some small branches, dipped in rooting hormones first, then covered the pot with plastic. I also had a few bare brances that i dipped one end with rooting hormones then wrapped up the entire thing in layers of wet newspaper, then sealed in plastic bags.... It's been a week, we'll see if any would take. The wet newspaper way is very effective in propagating roses, it takes three weeks for roots to emerge.
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Old July 22, 2016   #22
GrowingCoastal
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"then wrapped up the entire thing in layers of wet newspaper, then sealed in plastic bags."

How or where do you keep these wrapped stems?
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Old July 22, 2016   #23
NewWestGardener
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I just leave them on a shelf, so room temperature, there are many layers of newspapers and three additional plastic bags, so no light gets in. I only used stems, no leaves at all, and the root side also get some bark removed to get more exposure.
I just opened the packages up to check for progress and applied a bit more water to the newspaper. Now at 10 days, all rose stems have swelling, as well as blueberries, likely they will be ready for potting in a week. This is a very simple and effective way of propagation after several years of me trying other ways. I learned this from a youtube post from a professional nursery guy.
The bay stems showed no change, but stay green. I think they will root this way but slower than other stems.
Sorry for off topic a bit.
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Old July 22, 2016   #24
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Rose stems roots emerging.
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