I've got fifty hybrid willow cuttings in the ground as of March as the start of a natural
fence around my backyard. They are a cross between corkscrew willow and white willow and known as Austree willows.
Willows produce their own rooting hormone. You can even use willow water as a rooting solution for other plants.
They're famously hardy. You can take a willow cutting and stick it in the ground. It will probably grow.
Curly willow (salix matsudana) isn't just a coppiced weeping willow, it is its own species. They want moist but well-draining soil. Hope this helps.
j
Ann Marie Bessette wrote:I’m trying to propagate a few Willow cuttings. Does anyone have any experience successfully growing either curly willow or an actual weeping Willow tree? And forgive my novice and lack of googling, but are they the same thing? I guess I’m thinking curly willow is just a willow tree coppiced? So far I’ve dipped the cuttings on rooting hormone, and popped some in two different spots in the ground near water run off areas and started a few in a terracotta pot (which I’m now thinking could allow them to dry them out too much). Any insight or advice would be greatly appreciated!