Flowering Tree Grafts!
Hey everyone, do you ever purchase Trees at a nursery and wonder how it is that in season 1, they bear fruit, more often than not these are grafted trees, in the case of citrus and in particular lemons almost always this is done.
It greatly reduces the time to bear fruit from seed to fruiting maturity, this got me thinking...
Around a month ago I tried an experiment. To graft a branch from one of the apple trees in the orchard to a persimmon tree and vice versa. If you cut a branch off a tree and leave it on the ground within a few days this would be dry and dead, which leads me to believe my first two grafts have taken and worked. If I now scratch the bark off each of the grafted branches they still show signs of life and appear still to be green, very exciting indeed.
Here you can spot the distinct difference between branch colour and texture as well as leaves, naturally this is so as they are totally different tree species, whether they will successfully graft and integrate time shall tell, interesting it certainly promises to be!
I was now presented an opportunity, sure it will be super interesting having one tree bearing two different types of fruit, come summer we will know for sure, but what about one tree with two different flowers at once??
Naturally this idea came to me as we have bees and the more flowers one can have on or near your bees the better for the honey flow. We have bees on a site around 20 kms from here but no way to water our newly planted flowers daily, so what better way to get some branches off existing trees in this case the Cape Honey Suckle and graft it to the Bluegums at the property hence eliminating the need to water daily?? So this is what I did, and I feel it may just be a great success, but only time will tell.
I do not know too much behind the science of grafting and have also not researched it much, it is all just purely experimental, but a very interesting experiment indeed.
I simple cut a wedge on the end of the donor branch and a corresponding V shaped hole on the other branch, I get it to fit in as tightly as possible and then bind and fasten as tight as I can with insulation tape, hold thumbs and hope for the best.
Bees just love the Cape Honey Suckle as well as Bluegum flowers. I can only imagine if this works what the honey will taste like, time shall tell and I will keep you all posted, however if it works I will be doing this on a much larger scale as to supply my bees with massive volumes of permanently flowering trees all year round.
So far so good a great success from the outset. I have now grafted a total of 8 branches to 8 trees, this promises to be very interesting and I shall certainly keep you all in the loop.
Be sure to stay tuned for more of my epic bee-keeping and tree grafting adventures.
Have a lovely weekend.
Cheer$;)
Wow that is certainly a great idea if it works and will be so much better for the bees and other nectar drinkers there.
Ya know, i think u might be a fearless gardener as i would not have thot it possible to graft from such differing plant families.
Very excited to see what happens...keep on sharing, craig!
Obw...i subscribed to ur YouTube rainbow trout channel from the bee post. R u lighting up an ocra pod/fruit in ur pic? Thats madness! 😆
Hey brother, haha not sure thats an ocra? What is that even? Hehe, you certainly do have a fast flora knowledge? Did you study botany? Cheer$;)
Ocra is in the mallow family, which have medicinal qualities (keeps ur insides lubed up and guts working properly ie: consistant low-strain dooking 💩)
I know ocra because I'm cajun and our culture includes a cuisine called gumbo, which has ocra in it, and gumbo is what the Africaans called ocra.
Ocra: https://www.medicinalplantsanduses.com/okra-plant-health-benefits
To answer, i did study plants, not to get a degree, but to a degree that i was/am able to comprehend how they function in our world. I am interested in ethnobotany (those plants which grow around you locally that can heal you), ecological rejuvenation (how diff species of plants naturally repair damage to environment by just growing and doing their thing) as well as using perceived invasives in a productive and sustainable way. For instance, Arundo donax (or Giant Rivercane) is considered an invasive species in California waterways. It is regularly chopped down, hauled to landfill and the rhizome poisoned with glyphosphate based (or worse) poisons which in turn devastate aquatic life from the point of application down to the end point of all watersheds, our oceans.
Arundo was brought in by Latin immigrants to be used as a fast growing renewable and inexpensive building material. It was managed and kept contained by the frequent harvesting used for every purpose from flooring matts and wall infrastructure for shelters to blow guns for small game as well as many other things including baskets and large weavings. It only became a problem when its stewards were removed and the knowledge of how to use it with them.
Ive used it to relearn some of these lost and mostly forgotten skills so that at least i can show/teach others a different way to see the world around us...and when (no longer 'if') TSHTF there will be at least a nugget of how to use this readily available resource again. I guess thats why im attracted to those people like you who see the natural world around us as an abundant playground of plenty.
Its all about mindset, my friend! That and building upon those things that bring a community/tribe together.
Wow...that was prolly more than u needed!
Cheers 2U, mate!
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Oooo this is looking great, i need to trim an apple tree thats on the fence line as it keeps getting damaged, totally gonna try grafting the bits to one of the other fruit trees. Wonder if i can graft to the main trunk and encourage some new limbs to grow... off to google thanks for sharing
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Give it a try bud you never know I have cross grafted a few species I think some will take keep you in the loop. Cheer$;)
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