A selection of interesting pictures of baby apple trees which I grafted onto MM111 rootstock in March.
Due to other commitments they've been left to fend for themselves. Rootstock 'suckers' are visible on most of them - I should have trimmed them off promptly. I'll cut the suckers back to one bud this winter.
Some have been grafted high and some grafted low. The red label/tape is about an inch above the graft and suckers/rootstock shoots are emerging from that point due to the disrupted sapflow caused by the grafting operation (basically the graft union takes time to heal and restore full sapflow so the rootstock often vents out its energy with some shoots of its own.
Picture 1.
Several side-by-side.
Left: Hambledon Deux Ans MM111
Second left: Edward VII MM111
Centre: Milton Wonder MM111
2nd from right: Beauty of Bath MM111
Far right: Egremont Russet MM111 (grafted scion died - I experimented with a two-year-old scion and it didn't take - younger, vigorous shoots are always recommended and this underlines that using only young, strong, healthy shoots is desirable)
Larger pot in foreground: Winter Majetin MM111 (rootstock died - planted in sterile compost so almost certainly the rootstock was diseased when I received it - quite a few fruit trees die due to disease brought with them; it's not always the fault of the owner).
Due to other commitments they've been left to fend for themselves. Rootstock 'suckers' are visible on most of them - I should have trimmed them off promptly. I'll cut the suckers back to one bud this winter.
Some have been grafted high and some grafted low. The red label/tape is about an inch above the graft and suckers/rootstock shoots are emerging from that point due to the disrupted sapflow caused by the grafting operation (basically the graft union takes time to heal and restore full sapflow so the rootstock often vents out its energy with some shoots of its own.
Picture 1.
Several side-by-side.
Left: Hambledon Deux Ans MM111
Second left: Edward VII MM111
Centre: Milton Wonder MM111
2nd from right: Beauty of Bath MM111
Far right: Egremont Russet MM111 (grafted scion died - I experimented with a two-year-old scion and it didn't take - younger, vigorous shoots are always recommended and this underlines that using only young, strong, healthy shoots is desirable)
Larger pot in foreground: Winter Majetin MM111 (rootstock died - planted in sterile compost so almost certainly the rootstock was diseased when I received it - quite a few fruit trees die due to disease brought with them; it's not always the fault of the owner).
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