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Grafting Matt Jakubik
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Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Grafting

Matt Jakubik

Page 2: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

History

ancient technique

practiced as early as 1,000 BC

employed widely by the Romans centuries later

Page 3: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Grafting

two different plants are united so they grow together as one

Scion - top - vegetative part

Stock - bottom - root part

Page 4: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Scion

Rootstock

Page 5: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Reasons for use

give plants stronger more disease resistant rootscause dwarfingtop working - grafting many different varieties to the limbs of one tree

Page 6: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Reasons for use

insert different variety for cross pollination

propagate plants difficult to bud

Page 7: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Requirements

compatibility

must be related to each other to enable the stock and scion to grow together

Page 8: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Requirements

Scion wood

one year old

vigorous growth

Page 9: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Requirements

Timing

stock and scion should be dormant or have no leaves

Page 10: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Matching of tissue

cambium of two matched plant parts must come in close contact with each other

cambium cannot be allowed to dry out

Page 11: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Waterproofing

immediately after making graft, cut surfaces must be covered with a waterproof grafting compound

Page 12: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Types of Grafts

Whip Graft

-- used when stock & scion are small and are the same size

Cleft Graft

-- used in topworking trees

-- stock is usually much larger than scion

Page 13: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Budding

Actually a form of grafting

A single bud is used instead of a scion

Budding is quicker

2 main types:

- T-budding & Chip Budding

Page 14: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

T-budding

Scion and Rootstock must be compatible

Bark must be slipping

Examples: apples, pears, peaches, plums, cherries, and roses

Page 15: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Chip Budding

Very similar to T-budding

Advantage: wood can be dormant, bark doesn’t have to slip

Widely used for grapes

Page 16: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Layering

Page 17: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Asexual Propagation

Roots are formed on a stem

root while still attached to the parent plant

Page 18: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Asexual Propagation

the stem or root which is rooted is called a layer

the layer is removed from the plant only after rooting has taken place

Page 19: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Advantages and Disadvantagesrelatively simple

requires more time

requires a lot of work by hand

fewer plants can be started from each parent plant

Page 20: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Advantages and Disadvantagesusually very successful

some plants layer naturally - raspberry

Page 21: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Simple Layering

a branch from the parent plant is bent to the ground

covered with soil at one point

terminal end remains exposed

Page 22: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Air Layering

Ancient Chinese practiced air layering

process eliminates burying part of the plant in the soil

Page 23: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Air Layering

instead, a part of the stem is girdled

cut all the way around

the cut is surrounded by moist sphagnum or peat moss

Page 24: Grafting Matt Jakubik. History ancient technique practiced as early as 1,000 BC employed widely by the Romans centuries later.

Air Layering

Moss is wrapped with plastic to hold in place

roots grow from the wound on the stem