Grafting - 100% failure. Advice please.

Need to know the best time to plant?

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Kleftiwallah
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Last year during early winter, I took scions from apple trees, stored them over winter as informed on knowledgeable web pages and grafted them onto trees in early spring and had a 100% failure rate. :(

This winter or early spring I'm going to try again but without keeping the scions in a bucket of compost as instructed. I'm going to take them and graft directly without waiting. My question is, do I do the deed now before winter hits, in the depths of winter, early spring or when I see actual growth in the tree to which I shall graft. :roll:

So the question is when for the best chance of success? Over to you lot. :P

Cheers, Tony.
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peter
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Sorry, but what codswallop. :oops: to me misuse of the word knowledgeable. Never ever ever heard of such a technique for Apple grafting. :? :shock:

The material being grafted onto rootstock should be cut, walked to the rootstock and grafted. All done while dormant. Get the RHS book The Fruit Garden Displayed. :)

The dead or thoroughly contaminated scions you used stood no chance, every malignant microorganism in the soil had a chance to enter the wood while it dried out or soaked in the bucket. :?
Last edited by peter on Tue Dec 20, 2011 7:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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FelixLeiter
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Kleftiwallah wrote:as informed on knowledgeable web page

An oxymoron, in my view. With that in mind, though, I suggest that you check the advice I give here against a trusted source such as, for instance, a book.
I suggest you forget about grafting altogether and propagate using budding, as is the modern way. A nurseryman takes two stabs at propagating a fruit tree: the first attempt is to bud in late summer, which has a high success rate and is easy. The second stab is to graft onto rootstocks whose buds did not take. When you graft, do it as a piece using freshly cut wood, prepared and united in a swift operation. And be sure that the union is well sealed, to keep out disease but most importantly to keep moisture in.
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Kleftiwallah
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Thanks for that Peter. Now Felix, I've been waiting all year to have a second go at grafting, then you go and tell me I've eight or so months to wait before budding. I''ll have a second bash at grafting, but I'll definitely read up on "budding". Cheers to you both. Tony.
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FelixLeiter
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There's nothing to stop you having another go at grafting sooner, Kleftiwallah, then the budding later if the grafts don't take. It all amounts to the same thing, is how I see it. Don't be grafting quite yet, though — better to do it just as the sap is stirring in late winter.
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