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Starting Your Own Fruit Trees
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Author: Thomas Leo Ogren
*Note: This article first appeared in Grandiflora Magazine.
I flat out love growing fruit trees and have been
crazy about them all my life. Or at least, as much of my life as
I can remember. Actually, the very first thing I can clearly
recall involved fruit trees. I was about three, possibly four
years old. It was a warm, lazy spring weekend and my older
sisters were gone somewhere with my mom, but my dad was home,
working in the garage. I wasn’t allowed to cross the street by
myself, but down the block, across the street, was a beautiful
pineapple guava tree growing in the middle of some grouchy old
man’s lawn. The tree had a huge crop of large, green, totally
delicious fruit, but the owner wouldn’t let any of us kids pick
guavas from his tree, much less climb it. He claimed that we
would break the branches. He would however let us have fruit
that fell on the ground, but these guavas were generally too
soft and mushy. That day I walked down the street by all by
myself, seeing no adults or even any other kids around. I looked
at that tree and dashed across the street. The old man was
nowhere around and I climbed up his guava tree and started
stuffing big, fat guavas in all my pockets. I picked as many as
my pockets could hold and climbing back down I did indeed break
a few small branches. Looking both ways (of course!) I ran back
across the street with my loot. Back at home I found my dad
still in the garage and I showed him my stash, expecting him to
yell at me for crossing the street. But dad never did make the
connection and thus my first episode of crime was all in all, a
total success. Some fifty years later I now have five guava
trees growing in my own yard, all grown from seed. I also have
many other fruit trees, all of them homegrown ones.
Fruit From Cuttings Some fruit is so easy to propagate I always
wonder why everyone doesn’t try it. Grapes, figs, mulberries,
and pomegranates are all easy to grow from directly-stuck
cuttings. I cut off a piece of dormant wood, 12-18 inches long,
and I bury almost all of it in the ground where I want it to
grow. I leave at least one good bud above ground. Sometimes to
insure a better take, I’ll stick five or six such cuttings in
the same spot. If they all grow, then the next winter I dig up
the extra ones and give them to friends. I use cutting wood that
grew last year and find that wood that is about pencil thickness
or somewhat thicker roots the best. I recently accidentally
discovered a way to get plum wood to root for me. I used a long
whip of plum branch (dormant wood) as a stake in a one gallon
pot of some fancy gold heart ivy. To my surprise the plum wood
rooted and started to grow the next spring. I now do this on
purpose, using plum wood that is from last year’s vigorous
growth. I select plum whips 2 to 3 foot long, with no branching
on them, and stick each one all the way down into the center of
a gallon pot of some well-rooted perennial flowers or herbs. A
surprising number of these plums grow, and since they are "on
their own root,” they don’t need to be budded or grafted. Try it.
From Seed I have a spot in my backyard next to my compost heap,
and here I toss any and all old pits from plums, apricots,
peaches, and nectarines. I toss apple and pear seeds in here
too. At the end of the summer I shake an inch or so of old
compost over the area and see what grows. Since I do this every
year, I always have a ready supply of seedlings each year. In
the winter months, or in the very early spring months if you
live in a zone 4-7 area, dig up some of these year-old
seedlings, bare root, and pot them up one to each one gallon
pot. I use a 50-50 mix of potting soil and garden dirt. I then
water the pots, set the potted seedling on a table, clip off
most of the top, leaving 4-6 inches of trunk above ground, and
then cleft graft the seedling. Cleft grafting is, I think, the
easiest method and it works well with apricot, peach, plum,
nectarine, quince, apples and pears. I use a thin bladed knife
and tap it (tapping the back of the knife blade with a small
hammer or a piece of wood) directly into the center of the cut
seedling, going down only about one inch. I cut scion wood
(whatever you want to convert your seedling to) that is from
last year’s growth. I like to use scion wood that has a diameter
that is slightly smaller than the diameter of the seedling I’m
going to graft it to. The grafts, or scions, should be about 3
to 4 inches long and each should have several good, dormant
buds. The scions can be cut to shape with a sharp pocketknife.
Try to get your scions cut smoothly, with a gradual taper. The
scions are then tapped into place in the split seedling (the
rootstock), making sure that the cambiums of both scion and
rootstock match on at least one side. The cambium is the thin
green layer of wood that is just inside the outer bark. To keep
your work from drying out, cover the entire finished graft with
a thick coating of grafting tar or grafting wax. I also put a
dab of the tar or wax directly on the exposed cut tip of the
scion. Be careful as you do this, not to knock the scion out of
contact with the rootstock cambium. Now, unless a kid, bird, or
a cat bangs into this graft and knocks the scion askew, if you
did it right, come springtime the scion will sprout and grow.
Voila! You’ve got a grafted fruit tree. You can graft peach onto
almond, apricot, plum, peach or nectarine rootstock, and visa
versa. For sandy soils peach or nectarine make the best
rootstocks, but for heavy clay soils, plum is by far the best.
Apples can be grafted on apple seedlings, as can pears. Pear can
also be grafted on apple stock. If so inclined, scion wood from
quince can also be grafted onto apple or pear. An apple or pear
grafted onto a quince rootstock will be a dwarfed tree. If your
soil is clay, a pear rootstock grows best. If sandy or loamy,
apple is preferred. I grow these new fruit trees on in the
gallon pots for a year, making sure to cut off any sucker wood
that arises from below the graft. Keep them well fertilized and
watered and they will often grow 3-5 feet in one summer’s time.
The next year either plant them or give them away to friends. If
you have a potted fruit tree seedling where the graft fails to
take, simply cut off the unsuccessful grafted part. You can
re-graft it the next dormant season. If you have year old
seedlings left in the ground that you won’t get around to
digging and grafting, consider chopping them off just above the
ground in the late fall. The next spring these seedlings will
grow up with multiple trunks. The next winter dig your
second-year seedlings with multiple trunks, thin them back to
the strongest 2 or 3 stems, and then cleft graft each of the
stems to something different. I have made many three-in-one
trees this way, part plum, part apricot, and part nectarine.
These make extra nice presents. You can of course just as easily
graft each branch to a different cultivar of the same species,
such as three different kinds of plum on the same rootstock. A
tree like this is often very fruitful, since it will
cross-pollinate itself.
Budding Just a little here on budding. In zones 3-8 most budding
is done in May,. June or early July. The easiest method is
shield budding. A T cut is made on the rootstock stem, cutting
through the outer bark and the cambium, down to the hardwood..
Next you cut a thin, shield-shaped slice of wood (from scion
wood of the cultivar you wish to bud), containing one dormant
bud. This shield will be about 3/4th of an inch long. This bud
is then inserted in the T cut under the bark of the seedling
rootstock. I use thin, clear plastic tie tape to wrap the bud up
tightly. I will sometimes cut a tiny slice in the middle of the
tape and wrap the tape over the tip of the bud itself, which
should just peak out of the sliced portion of the tape. The tape
serves to keep the bud in close contact with the rootstock and
also to keep the bud graft from drying out. Keep an eye on the
budded stem for several weeks and by then if the bud and the
shield are still plump and green, consider it a take. Cut off
the rest of the stem half an inch above the new bud graft, and
this will force the new bud. Budding is not quite as easy to do
as grafting, at least not at first. It has several advantages
though. You can bud when the weather is nice and if the bud
doesn’t take, you can try it all over again in a different spot.
Budding is easiest on thicker rootstocks. I find that for me I
have the best luck budding roses, apples, pears and apricots.
Plums can be a little trickier. Cherries, by the way, are
considerably more difficult to graft and bud than are the other
stone fruits. If you are lucky enough to know an old gardener
who knows how to graft, ask him or her to show you how to cut
your scions. A little practice always helps as does a sharp
knife. There are many books with drawings of cleft grafts and
these too can be used as guides. It may sound a tad snobby, but
once you can graft your own fruit trees, you join a rather
select group. Almost all gardeners know what grafting is, but
not that many actually know how to do it right. One last
thought: cleft grafting is also easy to do on existing dormant
fruit trees. There is no reason you can’t graft some different
varieties on each of your trees. I have an apple tree with about
a dozen kinds of apples on it and a pear tree that has five
kinds of pear, plus quince and apple growing on it. I also have
almonds growing on one branch of a plum tree, four kinds of
plums on another tree, and both plum and nectarine on the
apricot tree in my front yard. I have five kinds of roses budded
on the climbing rose that grows on my front porch. I guess my
plants are all mixed up, but then, what can you expect from an
old guava thief?
Tom Ogren is the author of Allergy-Free Gardening, and, Safe Sex
in the Garden, both by Ten Speed Press, Berkeley, California.
About the author:
Tom Ogren's newest book, 2004, is, What the Experts May NOT Tell
You About: Growing the Perfect Lawn, from Time Warner Books.
Additional Articles About Fruit Trees:
Caring For Fruit Trees
As their name implies, fruit trees are simply trees that bear fruit. This may include apple, cherry, citrus (i.e., orange and lemon), durian, mango, morello cherry, pear, peach, nectarine and plum.
Cherry Trees
For most people, gardening and cultivating rare trees is a great hobby. Some people may also pursue gardening as a profession. Due to advanced techniques, most trees can be grown easily to form beautiful landscapes. Most trees are grown for functional purposes such as providing shade and bearing fruits. Trees can be selected to suit the climatic conditions and the type of soil of a particular region.
Modern Fruit Trees Evolved From Ancient Historical Roots
History of the evolution of modern fruit trees.
Fruit Tree Propagation
There are two main ways to go about fruit tree propagation. The first, and the one which usually comes first to mind, is propagation from seed. This occurs when the pollen from a one tree fertilizes the flower of another. The resulting fruit contains the seed, or seeds which may propagate the new fruit tree.
How To Properly Care For Your Fruit Trees To Keep Them Healthy
Because the main reason that fruit trees die is due to misunderstandings and common misconceptions, caring for a fruit tree not only requires responsibility, but also semi-extensive research.
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