The Hot-box report
The first flight of cuttings from the hot-box on the left. They are willow cuttings and I have a 20 Watt heating pad beneath it. Most of the cuttings are pushing leaves although the Crack Willow are lagging. I can see weeds sprouting which is a minor problem.
The second flight of cuttings are on the right. They came out of the box yesterday a couple hours before I took this photo. The buds are swelling. The bottom ends showed little sign of root development. I added wood-shavings on top of the potting media to provide insulation and to reduce evaporation from the potting media. There is another 20 Watt pad beneath it.
Both of these are covered with clear plastic and are underneath 4000K LED lamps.
The third flight of cuttings are in the box. I am callousing cv. "Steuben", "GR-7", "V. riparia L50-s". I expect to add a few cuttings of "St Paul" later today. I expect to leave the grape cuttings in the box for two weeks.
Unfortunately, it is difficult to get large quantities of potting soil this time of year and the mix is wetter than I want it to be for grapes. (The misspelling in the title "Rotting Cuttings" was a Freudian slip that I decided to leave) They are not as tolerant of "wet" as willow or elderberries. I will probably lay some rags in the bottom of the box and poke some holes in the bottoms of the bags I placed around the cuttings in.
Insulating a ceiling
The video where the older brothers insulate the roof of their sister's "house".
She came back to Ukraine after studying the German language in Germany. I get the impression that her arrival was sudden and unexpected.
Her "house" is a lean-to that was slapped together out of OSB and salvaged windows. They use old clothing that look like Goodwill Industry rejects to insulate the 12" between the ceiling and the roof.
This snippet is where the older brother makes her wood-stove.
It is a case of making do with what is readily available. Adelaide, his sister, seems delighted with the effort.
At the 19:56 mark, if you read the subtitles you will learn about "Oleg", the youngest brother (9 years-old) who is a compulsive builder. He is a kid who can look at a pile of scrap-wood and see a castle...and then nail it all together. He must be the kind of kid who is unable to NOT build.
View inside her house as she finishes up the interior. This video is much faster moving the the one linked above.
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