Posts: 1,074
Threads: 113
Joined: Sep 2008
02-26-2021, 01:32 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-26-2021, 01:33 AM by kimo wires.)
If you cut a branch off a large Hala tree can it be replanted? Grown into a new tree? Maybe with root tone ?
Mahalo for replies. KW
Posts: 1,074
Threads: 113
Joined: Sep 2008
(02-26-2021, 01:32 AM)kimo wires Wrote: If you cut a branch off a large Hala tree can it be replanted? Grown into a new tree? Maybe with root tone ?
Mahalo for replies. KW
So, nobody has an answer for this question?
One Thing I can always be sure of is that things will never go as expected.
Posts: 2,654
Threads: 42
Joined: Sep 2006
Here ya go:
http://www2.hawaii.edu/~eherring/hawnprop/pan-tect.htm
College of Tropical Agriculture and human Resources University or Hawaii at Manoa Wrote:In Micronesia, selected forms of Pandanus tectorius are propagated by stem cuttings. Plants with aerial or prop roots are selected and about 2/3 of the leaves are trimmed off to reduce water loss. Moriarty suggests using a mature branch with leaves and some small aerial roots and rooting it in a sand bed. Plants grown from cuttings fruit in 4 to 6 years.
Pua`a
S. FL
Big Islander to be.
If you don't mind hala from the wild, there are tons of keikis beneath the hala trees.
Posts: 93
Threads: 1
Joined: Jun 2021
a baby Hala tree from a Hala forest will grow far stronger and be healthier than digging up a large one or trying cuttings from a branch stuck in ground...
you can easily find keiki starters, 1-2' tall just spiraling off ground.. easiest kine to transplant will be kine growing in the thick matts of ironwood tree leaves (needle looking leaves) along Puna coast..