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Grafting effects.

Аарон ,это прививание опылителя на дикий инжир. Инж.Прив.Опылит..jpg 


Quote:
Originally Posted by Vladis
Аарон ,это прививание опылителя на дикий инжир. Инж.Прив.Опылит..jpg [/QUOTE) есть дыра над красной стрелкой . Разве этоне удалось бутон прививка ?

Аарон, на фото в сообщении 21 Вы можете видеть привитые ветви с листьями ( привой). Дефекты после прививания иногда остаются на растениях , что не мешает общему развитию привоя. Я удачно прививаю у себя в саду хурму , персик ,черешню. Планирую  в следующие сезоны прививание азимины трилоба  ,фейхоа.

Владик, 
Похоже, что вы стали экспертом со своими экспериментальными навыками прививки, я вас поздравляю :)

Аарон, у меня пока низкий процент успешных прививаний. Чтобы получить желаемый результат я делаю прививаний в 3 раза больше, чем нужно. Инж.Прив.20 Мая..jpg 


Vladis
You seem to do a lot of grafting!  Are you top working your trees for select varieties?  Do you have any preferred rootstock?

Сильно рослые, мощные растения для подвоя использовать лучше ,если делать прививание для растений растущих в земле. Мне нравится прививание на дикий инжир. Он вырастает спонтанно на участке, при участии птиц.

Grazie mille Vladis!

Aaron can you translate?

Pino, you can paste into google translate.  Here was Vladis' last post:

 
Strong tall , powerful plants for rootstock use better if done for grafting plants growing in the ground. I like grafting on wild figs . It grows spontaneously in the area , with the participation of the birds.

Another Question:

Hypothetically, lets say I grafted Fig "A" on Fig "B" and the result was what I wanted and calling it a Fig "AB1".
If I take an air layer from the "AB1" part what would the air layered Fig be, "AB1", "A" or "B"?

This would be interesting for us northern growers that don't have a long enough summer for some figs. For example ... would grafting a late season fig such as black madeira or pastilliere onto Florea rootstock make those figs ripen sooner than they normally would on their own?? Would that trait of the rootstock translate into the grafted variety?

Tyler

The rootstock can provide more vigour, disease resistance tolerance for wet ...

But it is not going to change the scion in any other way.   A Black Madeira grafted on any rootstock is still a Black Madeira but may behave a little different.

Yeah that's what I figured but thought I would throw it out there. Thanks Joe.

Joe,
have you done grafting to improve a production or alter the fruit in any way in past?

I am still curious to what refers to my Post #35 

Quote:
Originally Posted by Aaron4USA
Another Question:

Hypothetically, lets say I grafted Fig "A" on Fig "B" and the result was what I wanted and calling it a Fig "AB1".
If I take an air layer from the "AB1" part what would the air layered Fig be, "AB1", "A" or "B"?


Aaron,
I have never grafted figs.  I may try in the future for the fun of it. 
In the past I have grafted many grapes and different fruit trees. 
Plant A grafted on Plant B = a CLONE of the original plant A.  No genetic differences.  This is one of the major reasons to graft since seedlings seldom come true.

An example of the differences I have observed;

Cabernet Franc grafted on (SO4 or C3309) rootstock grows very vigorous and produces bigger healthier grape bunches and bigger berries.  It still ripens at the same time as cab franc on its own roots.  Although all other factors being equal the healthier the plant the earlier it will ripen.

Cabernet Franc on its own roots grows as a much smaller plant, smaller berries.  Still ripens at the same time.  After a few years it will die because vinifera grapes on their own roots are susceptible to phyloxera which is a root disease wide spread in North America. 

I have also grafted apples, plums, cherries ... the resulting plant has always been an exact clone of the original scion plant.