Louisiana iris growers may never imagine that they want to propagate their plants. Keeping up a garden is plenty of work, but the irises get crowded after several years, and the beds or containers will benefit from dividing the irises and replenishing the soil. And, suddenly, you’re in the propagation business, at least at a modest level.
Iris bloom stalks can produce new plants at the lower bloom nodes but not in the numbers that rhizome cuttings can. Rather like daylilies, iris stalks can be stimulated to produce an offset, and this will occasionally occur naturally on a few varieties, especially those with thick stalks. A new plant can be cut off and planted when it appears on a stalk.
There are two methods of stimulating the stalks to produce new plants, but unless additional plants are needed beyond those produced by rhizome division or rhizome cutting, they are barely worth the effort.
The first method is to place the flower stalk in a quart bottle of water so that the water line is slightly above the base of a leaf. If placed in semi-shade, offsets may develop in a few weeks. They can be removed when sufficient roots are apparent.
The second method is to place the stalk horizontally in a box with a mixture of sand and peat or some similar medium with the leaf base covered. If kept moist, offsets may be produced, and they can be taken and potted when sufficiently large.
Rhizome separation, rhizome cutting, and stalk offsets are all vegetative propagation methods. The plants produced will be identical to the parent plant.
Hybridization involves cross-pollinating irises and growing the resulting seedlings to develop new hybrids and cultivars, not to propagate or increase existing ones. The handling of the seeds is virtually identical to the process described here, but it is proceeded by significant work to decide on the irises to work with and later procedures to evaluate the worthiness of the resulting plants.
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