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Archives (2001)
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Cashing in with the 'lucky bamboo'
by Junelyn S. de la Rosa
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October-December
2001
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There's more than just luck or feng shui when
you own a lucky bamboo. A popular gift for almost any occasion,
Lucky bamboo is selling like hotcakes in the market. Lucky
bamboo is a very popular gift for all occasions. It is basically
grown in water in a decorative glass container with colored
stones or pebbles to keep the plant upright, no soil.
Selling
Lucky bamboo is a very lucrative business, the cheapest is
priced at P120 and the most expensive could reach up to more
than a P1000. Lucky bamboo could grow for years indoors and
virtually no care is needed. These plants are also used as
accent plants in dish gardens or as fillers in bouquets. Lucky
bamboo is really a Dracaena, not a bamboo. Specifically, Dracaena
sanderiana has two cultivars-- Gold and Ivory which came from
Congo, Africa.
Gold and Ivory plants are slender, succulent
with unbranched stems. Gold or 'Yellow Corn' has dark green
leaves with occasional faint lines of pale green. Ivory, also
called 'striped corn plant' or 'white corn' has alternate
glossy green leaves that taper to a point. It has broad white
to yellow-green margins.
For ornamental growers who wish to expand their
income and sell the Lucky bamboo as a hydroponic plant or
as a foliage plant, there is a technology that has been packaged
by the Institute of Plant Breeding of the University of the
Philippines, Los Baños (IPB-UPLB). The mass production
technology consists of three techniques: the 'exposed' method,
the use of plastic tent, and the mist system.
Gathering and Preparation of Planting Materials
- Tip Cuttings
- Secure healthy tip cuttings 10-15 cm long from vigorous plants.
- Place the cuttings in 6x6x11 polyethylene plastic bags then
sprinkle with water to prevent from drying.
- Nodal Cuttings
- Cut the plant 5 cm from the base. An erect plant can attain
a height of 70 cm.
- Secure about five to eight cuttings with three nodes each.
Retain at least two to three leaves per cutting to ensure
faster growth of the plant.Place in a polyethylene plastic
bag and sprinkle with water.
- Hormone Application
- To hasten rooting, soak the cuttings in 100 ppm Indole Butyric
Acid (IBA) solution for 30 minutes prior to planting. Cuttings
soaked in IBA solution will have uniform roots a week earlier
than untreated cuttings.
Mass Propagation
For the mass production of D. sanderiana, three techniques
can be employed: the 'exposed' method, the use of plastic
tent and the mist system.
- Exposed Method
- Prepare rooting medium composed of 1:1 burnt rice hull
and sawdust. Place the medium in a 6x6x11 polyethylene
plastic bag.
- Water the medium thoroughly.
- Plant the cuttings about 5 cm deep in the medium. A
maximum of five cuttings can be planted in 6x6x11 polyethylene
plastic bag. For tip cuttings, remove the 3-4 lowermost
leaves before inserting the base of the stems.
- Place the plants in an area with 60-70% shade.
- Water the plants daily.
- Plastic Tent
The use of plastic tent is ideal for large-scale production.
The structure, which measures 4 x 1 m bed can accommodate
60-80 plants depending on the size of the pots. It is fully
enclosed with a plastic sheet and placed in a partially shaded
area or inside a screenhouse. The roof is slightly inclined
to ensure that no water will clog on top. The cuttings planted
in polyethylene plastic bags are placed inside the plastic
tent and are watered at least once a day, usually in the mornings
to prevent drying.
- Mist System
The same procedure in the exposed method is followed in planting
the cuttings for mist application. In this method, the plants
are placed in a mist bed where they are subjected to continuous
misting during the day from 7 am to 4 pm. The bags or pots
used have at least four holes at the bottom to prevent water
lodging that may result to stem rot.
Transplanting
Rooted cuttings are ready for transplanting when roots are
already established, usually 3-4 weeks for tip cuttings and
4-5 weeks for nodal cuttings.
- Transplant individually in a 6x6x11 polyethylene plastic
bag containing an equal mixture of burnt rice hull and sawdust.
- Keep the plants under partially shaded areas (60-70% shade)
for a week before gradually transferring outside. Do not
expose the plants to full sunlight during the dry season
to prevent leaf burn.
- Avoid crowding the plants to minimize competition for
space which might result to plants producing longer leaves.
Shorter and more compact leaves are preferred in the market.
- One week after transplanting, apply complete fertilizer
(14-14-14) at the rate of 1 tbsp/4 L of water thrice a month
and once a month with urea (46-0-0), 1 tbsp/4 L of water.
If slow release fertilizer (17-17-17) will be used, apply
only once in every three months.
- Water the plants regularly during the dry season and minimally
during the rainy season.
- Handweed as often as needed.
(For more information, please contact: Dr.
Joy Eusebio of the Crops Research Division, PCARRD Los Baños
, Laguna at tel no. 049 536-0014 to 536-0020.) More Articles:
Vol. 3 No. 4 October-December 2001
»»
Outstanding technologies identified in nat'l R&D week
»» Thailand,
Philippines convene for agri cooperation
»»
Prospects for the ornamental industry in the new millennium
»» UPLB
scientists develop new hybrids of Philippine ornamentals
»» New management
techniques for exportable foliage plants
»» In
focus: a date with the "king of cut flowers"
»» Brighten
your homes with aglaonema
»» King
in red and green
»» Cashing
in with the 'lucky bamboo'
»» Turfgrasses:
the preferred ground cover
»» Catching
the invisible enemy with ELISA
»» Grow
dracaena godseffiana the easy way
»» Bromeliads:
the exotic plant
»» Wag that
fish-tail fern
»» Mass
propagating the 'doņas' through kulob system
»» Beauveria
mold bioinsecticide: safer control against orchid pests
»» Orchids
and mycorrhiza: a lesson from the wild
»» Controlling
white rust in chrysanthemums
»» Ways to
enhance palm seed germination
»» Prolonging
the vase life of cut flowers with ethylene adsorbent and Florafresh
»»
Mass producing the fragrant kamuning
»» The
national RDE program for ornamental crops
»» GMA
presents 2001 Gawad Saka awards
[More
2001 Articles]
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