Yes, if you have the proper age plant and the proper conditions for rooting the cutting. some plants are much easier to root than others. At the nursery where I work, cuttings are dipped in rooting hormone and propagated in a greenhouse with high heat and humidity and cuttings root very fast given these conditions.
A new rose plant grows from rose cuttings(stem cuttings).
Take cuttings of about two sections and place in a peat sand 50/50 mixture, water and leave alone in a warm situation and they will root.
Through stem cuttings
Yes.
Agarwood
Not that I've heard of. Only tip cuttings which are tricky at best.
The Sampson root propagates easily from seed or by root cuttings
The rudbeckia propagates easily from seed or by root cuttings
Echinacea propagates easily from seed or by root cuttings
Rooting gel is a hormone used for helping cuttings establish a root system.
agarwood
African violets are propogated by leaf cuttings.
The Missouri snakeroot propagates easily from seed or by root cuttings
The purple coneflower propagates easily from seed or by root cuttings
Yes, if you have the proper age plant and the proper conditions for rooting the cutting. some plants are much easier to root than others. At the nursery where I work, cuttings are dipped in rooting hormone and propagated in a greenhouse with high heat and humidity and cuttings root very fast given these conditions.
By seedPieris....can be grown from seed in a cold frame in spring or autumn, greenwood cuttings in early summer or semi ripe cuttings in mid to late summer with bottom heatIt is possible to root cuttings but it is usually done by grafting.