anyone try this with fruit tree.
#7772569
01/15/23 08:35 AM
01/15/23 08:35 AM
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Joined: Jun 2016
Michigan
Trapper Dahlgren
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Jun 2016
Michigan
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anyone try to get fruit trees to root off a branch, I try it a few years back with no luck , just cut a branch off a apple tree and dip it in some stuff that supposed to help them root
Last edited by Trapper Dahlgren; 01/15/23 10:22 AM.
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Re: anyone try this with fruit tree.
[Re: Trapper Dahlgren]
#7772740
01/15/23 11:57 AM
01/15/23 11:57 AM
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Joined: Jan 2007
Georgia
warrior
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2007
Georgia
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My understanding on apples, pear and other pome fruits is that they can be hard to root by cuttings. I do know rootstocks are propagated by stooling. http://www.suttonelms.org.uk/apple72.htmlYou might trying to mimic those conditions by heading back a limb then air layering the new growth.
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Re: anyone try this with fruit tree.
[Re: Trapper Dahlgren]
#7772778
01/15/23 12:43 PM
01/15/23 12:43 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
beaverpeeler
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
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Hazelnuts are commercially produced by stooling. As warrior says most rootstocks are also stooled so as to be genetically identical.
Even if you were to be successful in getting a cutting to root it may not develop a good root system. I do know that elderberries and figs are readily rooted from cuttings. Probably others as well. In Ecuador I knew an old retired Navy vet that planted a whole orchard of sweet limes from cuttings. I was surprised at that.
My fear of moving stairs is escalating!
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Re: anyone try this with fruit tree.
[Re: Trapper Dahlgren]
#7772779
01/15/23 12:46 PM
01/15/23 12:46 PM
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Joined: May 2007
Flint, Michigan
bhugo
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2007
Flint, Michigan
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Most Apple trees, and lots of other fruit trees, are grafted to hardy root stock. You could graft the cuttings on to crabapple seedlings. Even if you get a cutting to grow, it won’t be hardy enough for Michigan most likely.
Last edited by bhugo; 01/15/23 12:47 PM.
Member MTPCA, FTA and NTA
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Re: anyone try this with fruit tree.
[Re: Trapper Dahlgren]
#7871648
05/25/23 01:10 PM
05/25/23 01:10 PM
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Joined: Mar 2018
Missouri
HayDay
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2018
Missouri
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Something about this didn't seem right, so had to think on it a bit, then remembered instructions on planting trees from a local expert. Root stock determines tree size. If you root the variety tree top, what you will get is a full sized standard tree. Any attributes of the previous root stock will be gone. Think the same thing happens if you plant a grafted tree with graft union below the soil line.
Apparently that is done to develop the common pear root stocks, which re 85% to 95% full sized trees. I've started a pear stool bed, but have no idea how that is going to turn out.
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Re: anyone try this with fruit tree.
[Re: Trapper Dahlgren]
#7871758
05/25/23 04:05 PM
05/25/23 04:05 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
beaverpeeler
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
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Quince understocks are widely used to produce semi-dwarf pears.
My fear of moving stairs is escalating!
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Re: anyone try this with fruit tree.
[Re: Trapper Dahlgren]
#7871767
05/25/23 04:16 PM
05/25/23 04:16 PM
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Joined: Mar 2018
Missouri
HayDay
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2018
Missouri
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Am aware of quince, but have never been able to get my hands on any.
Easy to vote your way into socialism, but impossible to vote your way out of it.
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Re: anyone try this with fruit tree.
[Re: warrior]
#7871811
05/25/23 05:58 PM
05/25/23 05:58 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
beaverpeeler
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
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Rootstocks are selected for their in ground attributes or inferred traits to the scion.
Dwarfing is just one trait, suitability to certain soil types or resistance to endemic disease.
For instance while quince dwarfs pears it has poor to no resistance to firelight.
There are also some known incompatibleties between some cultivars and some rootstocks.
In citrus flying dragon trifoliate not only dwarfs but adds a small degree of cold tolerance. I don't think any rootstock is capable of imparting fireblight resistance to the above graft-union cultivar. If there is such a rootstock it would greatly surprise me. BTW, if anybody needs some quince rootstock I can supply cuttings this time of year that can be rooted with a mist bench or other good softwood cutting rooting situation. I get lots of quince suckers coming from one of the standard quince rootstocks that my quince trees are grafted to.
My fear of moving stairs is escalating!
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Re: anyone try this with fruit tree.
[Re: Trapper Dahlgren]
#7871885
05/25/23 08:59 PM
05/25/23 08:59 PM
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Joined: Mar 2018
Missouri
HayDay
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2018
Missouri
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I'd like to find some type of apple, peach, pear, plum, cherry or apricot that had half as much will to survive as this mulberry does. ![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2023/05/full-51773-178018-img_0689.jpg) That is growing in a gnarly crotch section of an ancient black locust tree. Likely as not, some bird dropped the seed with a seed coatingt of bird droppings (convienient starter fertilizer), where it found hope in a patch of dust in a deep crevice in that bark. That is about 5 feet above ground. Sent a root into the black locust tree, behind the bark layer. So a mulberry growing out of a black locust tree. And is producing.
Last edited by HayDay; 05/25/23 09:01 PM.
Easy to vote your way into socialism, but impossible to vote your way out of it.
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