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- #11
old fashioned
Attractive To Bees
I guess I didn't include enough information in my original question and I apologize.
I'm not looking to do any grafting of trees, I was more curious as to what nursery trees were grafted too- that if I bought any and the rootstock grew up along with the fruit graft, just what would I expect from the root growth if it produced fruit. Make sense?
I have a 3-way pear that is grafted to a quince. In the last few years there have been new shoots growing from the base or rootstock. Two years ago (I think) this new growth had flowers & some small fruits-no big deal & I didn't do anything with it. Then by last season this rootstock growth outgrew the actual tree and produced huge fuzzy pears. At the time I didn't know what they were until I asked here on the forum & found out my pear was grafted to a quince rootstock.
Since I have other types of fruit trees and several have these rootstock sprouts, I was trying to find out that if they should be left to grow, just what would they produce.
I will say here that I have a prune plum (Stanley I think) tree that has grown a peach branch from the side of the trunk. That was completely baffling to me since I had read somewhere they are not compatable and the branch was well above the graft line. I never did get any peaches or even flowers, but the leaves were unmistakably peach and were completely different than plum leaves. We ended up cutting off this branch because it developed a bad case of leaf curl & we didn't want it to damage the rest of the tree. The prune plum is & always has done just fine. I had called it my "Preach" tree.
I have read that cherry trees are commonly grafted to "Colt". My question here is...just WHAT is a "Colt"? Is it a cherry? If so, is it edible? Sweet or Sour?
Thanks again to all responses.
I'm not looking to do any grafting of trees, I was more curious as to what nursery trees were grafted too- that if I bought any and the rootstock grew up along with the fruit graft, just what would I expect from the root growth if it produced fruit. Make sense?
I have a 3-way pear that is grafted to a quince. In the last few years there have been new shoots growing from the base or rootstock. Two years ago (I think) this new growth had flowers & some small fruits-no big deal & I didn't do anything with it. Then by last season this rootstock growth outgrew the actual tree and produced huge fuzzy pears. At the time I didn't know what they were until I asked here on the forum & found out my pear was grafted to a quince rootstock.
Since I have other types of fruit trees and several have these rootstock sprouts, I was trying to find out that if they should be left to grow, just what would they produce.
I will say here that I have a prune plum (Stanley I think) tree that has grown a peach branch from the side of the trunk. That was completely baffling to me since I had read somewhere they are not compatable and the branch was well above the graft line. I never did get any peaches or even flowers, but the leaves were unmistakably peach and were completely different than plum leaves. We ended up cutting off this branch because it developed a bad case of leaf curl & we didn't want it to damage the rest of the tree. The prune plum is & always has done just fine. I had called it my "Preach" tree.
I have read that cherry trees are commonly grafted to "Colt". My question here is...just WHAT is a "Colt"? Is it a cherry? If so, is it edible? Sweet or Sour?
Thanks again to all responses.