From our established pistachio trees we cut a couple of twigs (scions) to graft on. I didn’t have a grafting knife, so I had to make one from an old cheese cutting knife. It wasn’t ideal, but the blade was nice and flat. We had some plastic wrapping tape and Tree Seal, an emulsified asphalt, so we were ready to roll!
Cut and peel the outer bark.
Slide the scion in nice and snug.
Wrap tightly, then seal the cut ends with Tree Seal.
Protect from hot sun with paper bags.
Meanwhile, we’re hoping it isn’t too late in the season do the same to some orange trees that were killed by snow and frost years back. They, too, reverted to root stock and produce some of the ghastliest excuses for fruit we’ve ever seen. We hope to graft on some navel orange twigs and see what happens.
Would you eat one of these? I tried, but they are so sour and dry and seedy I quit. Let’s hope navel orange grafts take hold.
3 comments:
Those 'oranges' look like our bush lemons. Are you sure the root stock wasn't a lemon tree?
I wouldn't know what the root stock is. To me the fruit looks like cottage cheese. So the root stock could be milkweed.
Lol!
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