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How long to leave rootstocks before grafting apples?

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  • How long to leave rootstocks before grafting apples?

    I have some MM106 rootstocks in a nursery bed, that I put in a couple of weeks ago. I think it's probably too late in the season to do any whip-and-tongue grafting (although an established apple in the garden that I have my eyes on has not really awoken yet), so my thinking was to leave them to establish a little, and then experiment with some chip budding towards the summer months - would this be sensible?

    Advice much appreciated in advance
    Take a look at my blog too

  • #2
    If you bud-graft in the summer you'll be able to re-graft any failures next winter - and vice-versa.

    It might be worth trying a few grafts now (say about half of your rootstocks) if the rootstock hasn't sprouted and if you use only scion wood that hasn't begun to swell its buds (maybe take a piece of scion wood from dormant wood further back down the stem). The worst that will happen is that the grafts fail and you can re-graft with buds in the summer.

    If the graft fails the rootstock will sprout a new stem. In fact, rootstocks often try to grow-out from just below the graft in their first year and those shoots will need to be pinched-out/removed at an early stage to prevent them smothering the slower-growing grafted shoots which grow slower because the graft takes a few months to fully heal and for full sapflow to be restored where the two pieces were joined.

    When you dormant-graft MM106 it is worth sticking the part you cut off into the soil because MM106 will grow from cuttings, especially if the shoot used for the cutting is a few years old and has small lumps on it (these lumps will send out roots and are sometimes known as burrknots).
    .

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    • #3
      That's very helpful, many thanks FB . Very handy tip about the MM106 cutting rooting too - should never need to buy any more!
      Last edited by Ninetrees; 20-03-2014, 03:28 PM.
      Take a look at my blog too

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      • #4
        Originally posted by FB. View Post

        It might be worth trying a few grafts now (say about half of your rootstocks) if the rootstock hasn't sprouted and if you use only scion wood that hasn't begun to swell its buds .
        I agree with FB.

        The first year I tried grafting, like you, I received my batch of MM106 stocks in late February. I'd read in Garner that it is better to let them establish stonking great roots for a year before grafting. However, being much too impatient, I did 10 saddle grafts and 8 took (the other two I regrafted the next year.). I have to say that the first year's growth of the scions on these stocks was significantly weaker compared to later experiences with stocks that had been established for a year before grafting.
        This could be an issue with very weak growing varieties.

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        • #5
          Very useful too, many thanks boundtothesoil. I think I'll try a couple now on the rootstocks, as the only thing I have to lose is scion wood anyway
          Take a look at my blog too

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