A few updates. The malformed breba didn't like the rain, and quickly browned and rotted
THe "lazy graft" appears to have taken, but the approach graft using the still-rooted scion is no more. I cut the graft off of the potted donor/scion plant too soon and the graft browned over time and the leaves dried up and fell off. Even worse, when I pulled the graft out, it appeared to have taken after all. dang it. Ill try again and be more patient. The rootstock is healing well
Here is nice looking chip graft
Here are several pics of the same whip/tongue graft, with the extra flap of bark/cambium from the rootstock as I described above. If only they all took this well. . .
THis one shows the extra flap. It looks like some of it (most?) has fused/joined/grafted pretty well
I have now had every single cultivar show some growth in at least one graft, with two very late bloomers.
My UCR135-15 end graft (whip or cleft?, Blue arrows) finally greened after 6-7 weeks, and the chip graft up-branch (pink arrow) is just greening today a full 8 weeks later. The red arrow is from the rootstock I let leaf out for some shade. I did that in a lot of places.
Armenian was my other late bloomer, showing green for the first time today after 8 weeks of looking like a dead stick.
I have learned to just leave them alone. If they dead, they gonna fall off without my help!
As the tree grows ever outward (and some varieties are going nuts with over 2ft of growth already), I am training multiple branches of each variety to the horizontal, to fill out the increasing circumference. I am hoping to avoid exclusive use of the "stake and string" method for want of ever increasing numbers of stakes (I rip them from 2x4s, four per) and the kinda fugly appearance.
I am instead using some fiberglass rods I salvaged after the little ones ruined yet another cheapo tent, about 2.5 feet long. I tie the rod in two places up-branch to secure it, and will be pulling the branches down as they grow
![[20140511_112847_zps968e8e34]](http://i82.photobucket.com/albums/j247/alauve/20140511_112847_zps968e8e34.jpg)