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Fruitwise guide to grafting over an apple tree

Posted by admin on Nov 24, 2009

Grafting is easy, it can enable you to change the variety of fruit a tree bears. This technique, also known as top working enables you to replace a tree with fruit you don’t like with a preferable fruit. Since posting this I have put up videos showing several techniques of grafting -saddle graft, rind graft and cleft graft. You are now (mid April) too late to graft trees for 2007/2008, but you can practice on spare wood and think and research about what if any grafting you would like to do …

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18 Comments »

414gbg:

Great video!

Is it possible to graft plum pens to other tree types with a successfull outcome?

//Sincere Regards

May 26th, 2008 | 9:55 am
stephenhayesuk:

No. you can only graft betwen trees of the same kind, e.g. pear to pear, apple to apple, although with stone fruits there is some overlap. Plums are hard to graft although I have done it, using plum rootstocks.

May 26th, 2008 | 12:24 pm
ballhitch2:

have one tree in garden about 5 years. could i graft couple varieties on and would it then cross pollenate itself. It gives a few fruit but have no room for another to help it.

July 12th, 2008 | 3:11 pm
stephenhayesuk:

Yes you can do this no problem. If you have a tree which gives good fruit but its hard to pollinate, you could just graft in one of 2 small pieces of wood from a suitable pollinator variety. do some research fist about which variety, pleny of information on Keepers web site (Google on keepers apple nursery Kent). plenty other info on web re pollination

July 14th, 2008 | 1:41 pm
MadBadVoodo:

Killer Vid!

Five Stars!!

July 20th, 2008 | 8:29 pm
marshallbentley:

All good except your grafted limbs are not large enough to support even 1 apple?

January 3rd, 2009 | 12:35 pm
stephenhayesuk:

King Crimson do, or did, indeed rock..

I bought their first single ‘in the court of the crmson king’ and had a copy of ther clasic ’21st century scizoid man’ on a sampler as a 15 year old in around 1970(couldn’t afford the album on my pocket money).

but should not be confused with the apple ‘Crimson King’!

January 23rd, 2009 | 1:11 pm
stephenhayesuk:

true, but hopefully they will grow.

January 23rd, 2009 | 1:11 pm
simonzon:

Terrific video, very informative. Just one question – when it comes to slicing the root stock or original tree, would I need to cut off all existing branches, and if I do not do so, would some of the original variety still fruit?

February 11th, 2009 | 5:44 am
stephenhayesuk:

Thanks Simon

the pencils of scion wood from the tree you wish to propagate are just removed as in the ordinary course of winter pruning.

As far as the stock is concerned, it all depends. You may be grafting on to a small single leader rootstock, or you may be grafting over a larger tree. Its up to you. If say you ingrafted 3 pencils of 1 to 3 different scions into an established tree and left most of it, the original variety would still fruit. i have a few like this. Handy for pollination.

February 11th, 2009 | 2:31 pm
shellandty:

you can graft lemons, limes, grapefruits,and oranges to same tree. and you can graft cherry and apple. and you can cherry to plum. and different kinds of roses to one . they need to take same soil type and nutrients. you can do several types of grafting. there is plenty of information available online.

March 10th, 2009 | 5:48 pm
shellandty:

grafting and budding are the same putting one plant to another for aesthetic or survival reasons. but pollination is propagation and hybriding. propagation is done by seeds or cuttings or propagating a hybrid by pollination and is done by pollination of two types compatable producing the hybrid seeds to be planted mixing the two into one type .

March 10th, 2009 | 5:57 pm
stephenhayesuk:

I know that all citruses (orange, lemon, grapefruit) are compatible, but not I believe cherry and apple.

Apples and pears are quite closely related and I read somewhere that a barely viable graft had been made, but barely viable is not much use to anyone and nobody does this.

New varieties come from cross pollination , but apples breed only apples (although thousands of varieties) and are grafted on to apple stocks to produce a predictable clone.

March 11th, 2009 | 8:44 am
morriswil32:

Crimson King Rocks!

March 21st, 2009 | 2:27 pm
ibdragonne:

I am creating a community garden.Last fall, the city removed trees, one of them being a rather large (16″ dia) old crab apple tree cut 2′” from the ground and is weeping sap.

Can I graft to it? What technique would work best? What should I do to protect the stump until I get branches to graft? Can I do apples AND pears?

All responses welcomed! I’m ready to get down and dirty.. lol

Brian

March 28th, 2009 | 11:59 pm
stephenhayesuk:

Greetings Brian

1 16″ diameter is aone big old tree! However if it is weeping sap there is a chance of grafting successfully

I wudl go for multiple rind grafting and paint the stump with bitumistic tar or similar.

You can graft apples to apples and pears to pears but not pears to apples. I have heard somewhere it might be barely possible with some cultivars but i wouldn’t try, none of my books mention it.

you have nothing to lose by rind grafting this big old tree, go for it.

March 29th, 2009 | 8:56 am
stephenhayesuk:

PS woth such a big diameter, you may have difficulty securing the graft with an al-round tie. You may do better to secure the graft with a very thin nail, thei important thing is to get good cambium to cambium contact and hold it frmly until union has taken place.

Another way might be to let some new growth come up from the stump and then saddle graft on to that next year.

March 29th, 2009 | 9:08 am
ibdragonne:

Thank you! I was wondering if new growth might occur, approx. 10 feet away, there is a 7 foot sapling that appears to be the same variety and was curious if it may be already attached to the same root system as this stump?

This sapling has partially grown into a 4 foot section of wrought-iron fence railing that I want to remove and use (the railing) without damaging the sapling, after the “surgery” will the tar help the wound? (the answer is probably obvious)

Thanks again!
Brian

March 29th, 2009 | 3:15 pm
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