
This past year my greatest excitement in gardening has come when propagating something new and finding that what I did actually it worked. One day in late summer I thought "what else can I practice propagating with?" The hollies looked like good candidates. So without waiting for the latest straw poll from Iowa I took two cuttings from the holly bushes.
The cuttings were mostly greenwood and it was a little later in the season than I probably should have taken greenwood cuttings but most of gardening is an experiment so why not?. Every time you try something new you learn something even if you fail. The two cuttings I made were about 7 inches long. I stripped many of the leaves off and placed them in sand after an initial root hormone application. It's pretty much the standard procedure used in propagating most cuttings. In fact, I treated it the same as I d

One quick general note about hollies. Since hollies are dioecious you need to have a male plant to pollinate the female plant's flowers to produce berries.
Look here for more plant propagation information.