It is well documented that oaks are difficult to near impossible to get cuttings to root. But here on BNut I've seen a small number of oak air layers that actually were successful. I don't know "out of how many tries", but there is no reason to not try. Your local bur oak seems to be one with nice corky bark on fairly young branches. You should give it a try. Do not rush it. Put the air layers on in spring. Keep moist. If they have no roots by the end of summer, just cut flat the bottom edge of callus that formed, scrape clean any cambium trying to bridge the ring you cut and then re-wrap and keep the moss wet through the following winter spring & summer. It can take 2 years to get good enough roots.
You might get lucky, and get roots right away. But you might not. Just don't give up for at least 2 growing seasons.
It is well documented that oaks are difficult to near impossible to get cuttings to root. But here on BNut I've seen a small number of oak air layers that actually were successful. I don't know "out of how many tries", but there is no reason to not try. Your local bur oak seems to be one with nice corky bark on fairly young branches. You should give it a try. Do not rush it. Put the air layers on in spring. Keep moist. If they have no roots by the end of summer, just cut flat the bottom edge of callus that formed, scrape clean any cambium trying to bridge the ring you cut and then re-wrap and keep the moss wet through the following winter spring & summer. It can take 2 years to get good enough roots.
You might get lucky, and get roots right away. But you might not. Just don't give up for at least 2 growing seasons.
I've often wondered if some soil from the pot mixed into the air layer soil would help?? Some oaks are known to be mycorrhizae obligate. I've wondered if the fungal relationship would help encourage root growth after a callus has formed.Could it help to use a little bit of hormone powder, or would that do more harm than good?
I've often wondered if some soil from the pot mixed into the air layer soil would help?? Some oaks are known to be mycorrhizae obligate. I've wondered if the fungal relationship would help encourage root growth after a callus has formed.
But then again, I've seen many oaks with branches that have buried themselves that I though should have layered naturally but haven't. But maybe those never had a callus to start roots from?
But, yes, I've seen just enough documented successes of layering oaks to think there may be some "trick" that can increase the odds. Unfortunately, I do not currently have access to any oaks to test some ideas out with
Please don't do anything on my account...but I see no harm in it if you do...
One thing I want to try if I can find something acceptable to try it on is to mulch some of the leaves and mix in some soil from the paren and try to encourage mycorhyzal growth around the callus. What I was thinking was to make a standard air layer, let it callus, open the layer to score/reopen the callus then try to encourage mycorrhyza around the callus in the hopes that a symbiosis forms that encourages root growth. Crushed leaves from the parent should provide suitable organics and soil from around the parents should be a good innoculent for the preferred mycorr species.
This is pure speculation/wishful thinking on my part! I do have several oak species in pots. All but my gambel oaks have a tendency to grow mushrooms when it is cold and damp. I have bare rooted when repotting, but I've never "washed" the roots and am always careful to bring old soil into the new pot in the hopes of seeding new fungus. I haven't killed an oak repotting since I started doing that. I have a larger shingle oak I collected for this competition that I was also sure to carry soil forward for when potted. It may turn out to be a superstitious old wive's tall, but I've read sources that claim some oaks are mycorr obligate and, as long as my anecdotal evidence doesn't disagree, I see no harm in treating them that way...
@Gabler
I DO NOT recommend adding soil. I do not recommend adding inoculum until AFTER the air layer is separated and is being established in on roots that have already formed.
Hehe...of coarse! Well digital acquaintances anywaySorry, I wanted to be clear, but I probably should have toned down my response.
Still friends?
Since both of our successful attempts match perhaps there is something to this as a theory. I have more oaks to take out around this age perhaps I should try again and being in FL I can probably do this in one season. I’ll try a set with and without foil. I’m hoping 3 months getting callous and next three roots then three months recovery before winter at max. As soon as my weekend from hell is over I will try and get my oak layers done.Two successful air layers achieved on Quercus robur but both times the layer took two seasons. Each time the lower half of the callus was recut and bridging was removed.