I love my pretty little Brunnera "Jack Frost" and decided I'd try to see if I could get it to root from cuttings. Some plants, like rosemary, mint, salvias and plectranthus, will easily grow from cuttings; you just cut a section of stem, pick off the lower leaves, and roots grow from where the leaves used to be. But I couldn't tell from my internet research whether brunnera was a plant like that. But there's no harm in trying!
So I cut this flowering stalk from my brunnera. I cut off all the flowers and cut the stem into four pieces. I tried to give each stem a section where I picked off the leaves to see if roots would grow where the leaves used to be.
![http://www.alexareynolds.com/garden11/brunneracut1.JPG](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_uXr-KxfSNwSN-yrLicBPuE6VdpqjU1OpWqieexhmvFaqbcb4qj7tedsDh2LOeR4gllccAFbx4ZOyVhojnAIHB2kgtsuCrGwkMxnQidSzNTeYTcQovdw4_kIA=s0-d)
Then I dipped each cutting in root-hormone powder that's meant to encourage it to grow roots. I put them in a Ziploc bag with moist potting mix and sealed it closed to keep it from drying out. Now I just wait and hope! So far they haven't shriveled up or molded.
![http://www.alexareynolds.com/garden11/brunneracut2.JPG](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_ti_3LqQ2mJ7VoaKCgx35iDtSqg9EI9la8n5k0lH0f363UiW3H9NiAmpaIPNbctQ3MWF2SHkJtQyJpAjZE83-wGhMS-OiJufhosHeU2UpfoTt7x9m0YXgxquA=s0-d)
![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_stjFET2jr6fLJsEJEkAbme96dhtXIeEdLew7w0lwDCYkLdcN_6ZoRoqsEdGZKYClnrNADhEF0pg4z_GgrABK__xXy1yj6RiLpEp3zG13XdESSftlytbCc9OE5Ehvf8fiZ4EaUQppusrjrkx9g=s0-d)
So I cut this flowering stalk from my brunnera. I cut off all the flowers and cut the stem into four pieces. I tried to give each stem a section where I picked off the leaves to see if roots would grow where the leaves used to be.
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