Search

Search My Garden Blog with Google Custom Search

12.10.11

Ornamental Sweet Potato Vine Layering Propagation.


Propagating your ornamental sweet potato vine to expand your plant collection, or to overwinter your plant to grow again next year is really easy. You can take cuttings of your ornamental sweet potato vines and root the cutting in water. But using a simple layering method or (tip layering) is just as easy and saves you the repotting step of rooting in water because the vine will root in a pot with potting soil as it grows.


Ornamental Sweet Potato Vine propagation


I find layering propagation of ornamental sweet potato vines is faster when you select the tip of a growing vine like in Figure 1. Take the tip of your sweet potato vine and begin to wrap it along the inside of a pot with your favorite potting soil as seen in Figure 2 and wind the vine making sure to bury the vine with potting soil as you go around. You can secure the vine in place as you wind around your pot by using some U-shaped pins like in Figure 3. This will help keep the vine below the soil level where it is dark and moist; encouraging root to form from the leaf nodes along the vine.

 Pin for air layering Sweet potato Vine during propagation

If you don't have any U-shaped pins you can quickly MacGyver some out of a piece of wire from your tool shed or from a paperclip as demonstrated in the image above.

Propagating Sweet Potato Vine

After a couple of weeks your ornamental sweet potato vine will be fully rooted inside the pot you layered it. As your vine is rooting make sure to keep it moist and don't allow the soil to dry out. The moist soil will encourage your vine to root and the roots drying out at this stage could keep your vine from establishing. Once you're happy with the root formation inside the pot and you notice lots of new growth you can separate your vine from the parent plant but cutting somewhere along the line illustrated above in the picture of the ornamental sweet potato vine in my garden.

How to Root Cuttings of Ornamental Sweet Potato Vines


 

Whether you choose to root your ornamental sweet potato vines in water or decide to propagate your vine by using a layering technique is a matter of preference. Sweet potato vines are easy to root whether you want to make more to plant in your garden, or you're looking to overwinter some indoors to save you some money the following growing season.

14 comments:

  1. A good technique and a clear explanation. Might just use that one day. thanks. hope all is well in Chicago!

    ReplyDelete
  2. They look like something I can put in water to and will grow roots if I can get some cuttings from a friend. Can I keep them in the water long term or should I plant in soil once they grow roots?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I've had mine in water for about six months and its doing fine.

      Delete
    2. Hey now! I've had my vines in water since may (about six months) and its doing fine.

      Delete
  3. Neat trick, Mr. BT! I love sweet potato vine, but have never bought any. Will they grow in full sun??? I love the light green and purple grown together!!!

    ReplyDelete
  4. @Webb, Thanks for the feedback. Things are great here.

    @Alina, Once they're rooted they'll grow better if you transplant them to soil. If you use the method described above you can skip the transplanting step all together.

    @Julie, They do better in full sun. The green and dark ones are my favorite. There are some nice cultivars out there if you really like the dark sweet potato vines.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I had never thought of doing it that way...I've actually never saved any sweet potato vine, but I might try this year... I like the water propogation way, I use it to make new houseplants out of the pieces I break off when I move them around. I also am doing a lot of coleus that way...I've had success with those. Neat post.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I've done root layering with shrubs, but never with spv, and my gut instinct would have been to root it in water, like coleus, so thanks for the tip. I like this method because you root it in another pot. Clever. P.S. Even though I really like them, I have never (gasp!) grown a spv!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I wonder if I can root my cuttings directly in my water garden? It's small, 35 gallons, and is sunk in the same bed where the vines are growing now.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Anonymous10:21 PM

    Do you use different types of sweet potatoes to get the different color vines

    ReplyDelete
  9. So where do you get the vine to start this?

    ReplyDelete
  10. I planted a potted one in my yard and it took off and love it. But now that its gotten cold (although not terribly as we are in houston) it has all started to shrivel up, brown and die. Will it come back on its own? Or should i take some good clippings that are left, water root them and replant the whole thing in the spring?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They will not survive a freeze. Maybe I'm a bit of a glutton, but I take as many healthy cuttings as I can, root in water then transplant to red solo cups. I have plenty for my baskets and to trade for other hanging basket plants come spring😅

      Delete
    2. They will not survive a freeze. Maybe I'm a bit of a glutton, but I take as many healthy cuttings as I can, root in water then transplant to red solo cups. I have plenty for my baskets and to trade for other hanging basket plants come spring😅

      Delete

Hi!

Feel free to leave a comment. You can always use the search box for my blog or the search "Google For Gardeners" if you're looking for gardening information. If you're looking for seed saving information check out "Seed Snatcher"search engine.

Do not have a blog yourself? Comment using the "anonymous" feature. If you have a Twitter or FB account feel free to use the "Name URL" feature so other people can find you.


Thanks for visiting.