No text or picture Add-ons were added yet. How sad!
This is some cider apple that I grafted over. I think it was Broxwood Foxwhelp. I’ve got it written down somewhere, the friend Andrew Lee; let me have one of the trees that I want. There are too many. They’re grafted cut, sold back and grafted over to this reality. So it's mainly double cleft grafts.
Today is the9th of them. It's a double rind graft there. The material such that you really need to put a rind graft. You couldn’t speak really different cleft graft there and here’s a saddle graft as I said before, if you have repetition, repetition can be held for just to get a point across. The type of graft to use very much depends on the time. It's whether your graft need to. So, that you know it used to be thick that’s a rind graft. Well, it's just about thinking of the split, that’s a cleft graft. Here where’s pencil thick, a saddle graft.
Here are some of the original trees growing away. People thought there are enough branches. It's not a bad idea, but people’s opinions vary on this. Some of the original trees have been pulling the sap up to be you know, I mean it's a real live growth and of course to pop anything else, if your grafts don’t take, few grafts fail. I’d like to say all of these have succeeded so far. They’re looking quite good but if your grafts fail, then if you got some just like this that you’ve left for the original tree growing wide then you graft on to them later.
So, here we are, beginning of second week of June, next is some tree that –one, two, three four, five, six, seven eight, nine pencil’s graft today which was sent through the post by a friend of a graft that I didn’t have and they are currently growing away. You should ask new growth there, currently growing away very nicely indeed.
Transcription by:
Scribe4you Transcription Services