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Thread: Fruit, Nut, and Vine Grafting, Tree Propagation, Tree Care

  1. #21
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    Good to know. I know we have several different types of pecan trees and they produce different types of pecans. Some more than others, some smaller and meatier, some larger with thin shells, etc. The trees my grandfather planted have been there close to 100 years now. My father planted some at their house and those are around 40 years old. I bought a couple trees for my dad years ago and they came from Stark Brothers Nurseries online and so many varieties we weren't sure what to get. Some produce better, good to know this can sort of be changed around using grafts.

  2. #22
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    Jayhawks make great jelly. I’m sure wine as we,,. You sir are a mad arborist!
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  3. #23
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    Default This is the First Pecan Pie Using Last Years Pecans

    Growing your own Pecans is so rewarding, also marrying a Pennsylvania Dutch woman who is a Baker. We are just getting into last years pecans for this pie. It's too good looking to just post here, Cooking Crappie will need a picture for the Chow Hounds too.

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    I would be diving in that pie headlong.!
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    Wow, yours looks fancy and professional. Ours usually has the pecans all chopped up on top and the whole pie is loaded with them! I miss my grandmothers pecan pie, hers was the best!
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  6. #26
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    Default Making Use of New Crabapple Tree Pruning

    I ordered 4 Crab Apple trees last fall. Your have to order fruit trees 7-8 months out these days to get decent selection and stock quality. This spring I received a Virginia, Wickson, Chestnut, and Transcendent Crab Apple trees. When they are planted some pruning is required as the top buds are too numerous for the Rootstocks pruned roots. I always have old Rootstocks of various variety. These I practice knife skills on and if the grafts take its a bonus. I had 4 take, one of each. These will be planted in the Fall after the Heat is over.

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    After making the cuts using my knife and match up the Cambium of each side (Cambium is the light green line between the Bark and Wood) I first wrap the graft in Parafilm to protect it from water intrusion and prevent the graft from drying out. Afterwards I have found on small caliper grafts Electrical tape, specifically Scotch 88, is the best compression tool to go over the Parafilm with. Posting this now will act as a primer when grafting is in full swing, you will have a understanding of what I'm doing.

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    Once the graft takes you keep all sprouts below the graft cut off so all the energy goes into growing a better graft union and new variety wood. These old Rootstocks will need root pruning before planting so also what top wood will need equal pruning so you keep the Roots ahead of the Top Wood.

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    Even with the heat wave the grafts from April have mended very well. In the picture above the Graft Union is centered.

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  7. #27
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    Another quick post due to the heatwave, all my Citrus is Sun Scalding due to the last of moisture. Although they were all on automatic waterers running 4 times a day the intense Solar Rays still were burning the leaves. We get hard freezes so all my trees are in 65-200 gallon planters. Here I'm moving the trees out into the front yard where I have 3 Arizona Ash trees I have grown & pruned into a great canopy for muted Sunlight.

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  8. #28
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    Wow! Lots of potted trees there. How fast do those ash trees mature and are the Emerald Ash Borer “friendly?
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  9. #29
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    Love those large planters. I need some of those.
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  10. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by BuckeyeCrappie View Post
    Wow! Lots of potted trees there. How fast do those ash trees mature and are the Emerald Ash Borer “friendly?
    I traded for those trees about 28 years ago. They are a grafted tree, not sure the Rootstock. It suckers frequently but I have never propagated the suckers to see what it was. These are pruned sometimes twice a year to get them to open up like they are on the inside but put on a full canopy. The average age lifespan is 25 years but thru pruning you can double their life. I use a commercial chemical that when mixed and poured over the tree roots it is sucked up into the tree killing anything that feeds on it be it Leaf, Bark, or Root insect. In fact getting ahead of my planned posts I use it on all trees here except Figs.
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