Pelargoniums (Pelargonium sp.) are popular balcony ornamental plants from the Geraniaceae family. The most common method of propagation of pelargoniums is propagation by cuttings. There are three types of cuttings in the propagation of pelargoniums: unrooted cuttings, rooted cuttings and, callus cuttings ('Ready-Rooter' cuttings). Own production of 'Ready-Rooter' cuttings could reduce the price of production of geranium seedlings. 'Ready-Rooter' cuttings root faster and this way we get to the final seedlings sooner, which makes production cheaper. In the experiment, we used cuttings of two varieties of pelargoniums, ‘Tango Dark Red’ and ‘Feuer Cascade’. These cuttings were pushed into slabs filled with quartz sand. After two weeks, the cuttings were transplanted into plates with paper-pots filled with substrate. Since the experiment with quartz sand was not the best, we adjusted the experiment the following year. This time, instead of quartz sand, cuttings of the same varieties were pushed into plates with paper-pots filled with the substrate for pushing. We performed the stimulus twice. We noticed that the cuttings from the first term of the shoot rooted better, with 21 % of the cuttings rated 5. After one week, the cuttings already had visible callus, and after two weeks, the roots were also visible, some of which were visible on the paper-pots. The length of the new shoots was measured 14 days after the shoot. We measured the sum of the lengths of new shoots on one cutting and the number of new shoots. For the 'Tango Dark Red' variety, the maximum shoot length was 20 cm and the number of shoots was 6, and for the 'Feuer Cascade' variety, the maximum length was 10 cm and 4 shoots. Both in rooting and in new shoots, the best results were shown in the variety 'Tango Dark Red'. We found that this variety is more suitable for the production of 'Ready-Rooter' cuttings than the 'Feuer Cascade' variety.
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