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WHEN to use WEDGE GRAFTING TECHNIQUE on FRUIT TREES
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- Опубликовано: 6 авг 2024
- The STRONG Connection, NO TYING Wedge Grafting Technique is one of the best you can use to graft medium and large diameter fruit tree rootstocks or when changing varieties in your Fruit Trees. It can be used in plants with thin bark, unlike the BARK GRAFTING technique. The wedge shaped scions secure firmly to the rootstock and NO TYING is necessary. It also produces a STRONG connection with no hollow spaces in the rootstock wood.
Table of contents:
0:00 - Intro
1. Reasons for using the WEDGE GRAFT - 00:37
2. WEDGE Grafting TECHNIQUE - 02:43
3. Common Mistakes when WEDGE Grafting - 07:09
Below are links to other videos featuring detailed grafting techniques:
GRAFTING 8 FRUIT TREES - with RESULTS | Plum, Almond, Pear, Apple, Nectarine, Fig, Peach and Olive - • GRAFTING 8 FRUIT TREES...
Best Grafting Techniques | WHICH Grafting Technique should I CHOOSE, when grafting fruit trees? - • Best Grafting Techniqu...
Best Techniques for Grafting Figs and other fruit trees - • Grafting Fruit Trees |...
Grafting Grape Vines in EARLY SPRING - • Grafting Grape Vines i...
7 COMMON GRAFTING MISTAKES and HOW to AVOID THEM | Grafting Techniques TIPS - • 7 COMMON GRAFTING MIST...
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Share the video - • WHEN to use WEDGE GRAF...
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#Grafting #JSacadura
Do you need to graft in late winter and the bark is not slipping? Use the Wedge Graft and you don’t have to worry about that. Large scions can be used even in rootstock with thin bark. Rock solid unions without any need to tie the grafts and no hollow spaces inside the rootstock wood, like in the double cleft bark. Not the easiest of grafting techniques to master, but well worth the trouble.
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I will try to answer as many comments as I can.
Hello I have a question what technique do you use to grow apple faster because I have heard that they start having fruits in 6 or 5 years
Hello, I have just bark grafted a cherry tree but the bark wasn’t very slippery. Could the graft still work?
If the apples where grown from seed that not much you can do (apart from taking good care of the tree and making sure it has all it needs to grow properly), as you will have to wait 5-6 or, sometimes, even more years for the start of fruit production. Grafted apples, on the other hand, will typically start producing fruits at 2-3 years old, depending on several factors, like the pruning method and the rootstock used.
Dragos, the graft might still work. The problem with lifting the bark while the plant is still in dormancy (as I try to show in this video) is that it might not lift at the right point - where the cambium layer is located If that happened the scion won't have a chance of healing with the rootstock. When the sap is flowing, the bark slips easily and the cambium layer of the rootstock is exposed when you lift the bark - which makes the healing process with the cambium layer of the scion pretty much guaranteed.
@@JSacadura okay, indeed it was a little hard to lift but i think i managed to do it. Thank you for the answer and keep up the good videos ! Have a great day sir
I´m 65 Years old and still learn something new from your excelllent videos! Very good camerawork too!!!
You are literally the only channel and source of continous and viable grafting techniques on RUclips.
Glad you appreciate my work. Thanks for the nice comment.
You are absolutely right .
i have no idea how i ended up on tree grafting youtube but this was a lovely video nonetheless. Thanks for the info!
Maybe you watched some chainsaw videos. At least, I did and got here.
Looking for more grafting???
Thank you. You are very good. As a grafter and narrator.
Glad you find the videos useful. Thanks for the comment.
Smooth and steady striking that thin edge Ole'Timer, stopped it on a clean line too, very nice work. Grandma used to say that type of work should be done the day before a full moon but there's a better way. Wrap your work in a PEMF blanket, set to 16Hz, and it will astound you.
Subscribed.
I have to admire the ease and skill or his grafting, these videos are so good and clear with complete information for even the most inexperienced.
Glad you like them! Thanks for the nice comment.
your tips at the end of your videos are most appreciated, thanks
you are a true master 👨🎓! Thank you for sharing your valuable knowledge here and god bless!
I have never clicked on a video so fast
So nice of you. Thanks for the comment.
You've never watched white chicks twerking...have you lol
Me too
I'm not sure how I got here, or what time it is, but I'm glad I did as this is very interesting, thank you. I don't know when I'll use this information, but now I know it, thank you. :-)
Saludos desde Ecuador 🇪🇨. Es un gusto poder saludarlos y ver sus videos de injertos de diferente clase y variedad, para quienes amamos la fruticultura son muy útiles y de esta manera podemos aplicar en nuestros huertos.
Es usted muy amable. Muchas gracias por el comentario.
Great 👌
Thanks ✌️
Great video keep up the awesome work you do teaching all of use.
Excellent video, very good technique for ‘grafting over’ fruit trees from one variety to another, especially early in the year. Thanks for all your great content on this channel, its become a very valuable resource.
Glad you find my videos helpful! Thanks for the comment and the support.
Thank you so much...greetings from Indonesia🙏🙏
Thanks a lot for wonderful videos. Big help for us beginners
Usted da las mejores explicaciones respecto a este tema, muchas gracias por enseñar estas técnicas. Saludos desde Argentina
Es usted muy amable. Muchas gracias por el comentario.
Merci de partager vos connaissances 👍
Thanks to your help
I learn many new things about grafting from your videos
I'm glad you find my videos useful. Thanks for the comment.
Once again nice and exceptional video . Thank you sir for your effort and success .
Buenos consejos. Gracias por sus enseñanzas. Saludos cordiales desde Extremadura
Nice grafting video. Very informative.
Excellent
Cada vez me sosprendes mas.Un Abrazo
Very nice information thanks so much sir.
This is such great content. Really appreciate it.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for the comment.
Brother the way u explain its really amazing very easy to learn..... thanks a lot ....keep it up.....Love from India.
It's always interesting👍I try not to miss your videos, I like to watch how great you are🤝
Glad you enjoy them! Thanks for the comment.
thank you for the useful information!
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for the comment.
Красота!
Tks
Another great video, thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for the comment.
Top videos JSacadura. Innovative and creative you are. Obrigado.
Thanks for the info..👍
Great idea.👍🙏
Good , good !!! Thanks
you are a Master. thank's
That's very nice of you. Thanks for the comment.
OTTIMO video e OTTIMO canale
👍👍👍👍
Good info!
Thankyou master
I think is important to use technics you get use to... I used the wedge grafting without knowing it existed!... And and a tonge conection that I will change to whip and tonge... And that's it... No other graftings
Excellent explanation, thank you
You are most welcome! Cheers!
Great job.. Very good informative video.. Keep going.
Thank you, I will. Thanks for the comment.
My grandfather felled a tree on top of my mom's weeping cherry and broke it. Was surprised to see that it was grafted twice; the trunk onto the rootstock, and the crown onto the trunk. The graft is still partially intact, so I was debating just waiting to see if it sent out more shoots in the spring. If not, I was considering a bud or bark graft to repair the tree. This might be another option, but the trunk is still a fairly small diameter... perhaps a couple inches.
They probably used an interstock (intergraft). These are used for several reasons but in cherries its usually so we can use a specific rootstock that is incompatible with the desired cherry variety. Using an intergraft that is compatible with both rootstock and variety avoids any incompatibility problems between them. If you still have the trunk (the intergraft) you can graft any variety on it (if the bark is not thick enough for a bark graft, wait for a shoot or use the wedge graft). Grafting directly on the rootstock or any shoot from it, will probably fail.
Отлично, ждем новых видеороликов!!!
Wow nice knowledge
As usual great informative video.👍👍
Thanks 👍
@@JSacadura Thanks for coming up with such wonderful videos.👍
Thank you
Muy bueno. Lo mejor que ha mostrado.
Me alegro de que el video haya sido útil. Muchas gracias por el comentario.
Super
I need to try this technique. I have a large old ornamental plum I wouldn’t mind changing to something edible, this is probably the best technique in this case.
Hi, Jared. It works pretty well but its a bit tricky to execute. Bark grafting is much easier to do, but the risks of dehydration from heat, with the good weather, also increase.
Interesting I may try your technic
Thanks.
Woo amazing
Good to know😃😃😃😉
Thank you. Your videos are excellent. The step-by-step instructions you give are easy to follow. I am going to try this technique with some well-established sour citrus rootstock and also with wild plum rootstock (Central Florida, USA). Do you make your own pruning paste? If so, I would be interested in a video about that. Best to you!
Hi, Kimberly. The characteristics of citrus wood rarely proves well with this grafting technique, but you are welcome to try it. Nevertheless, I would probably use patch grafting (on older trees) or bud grafting (if the trees are younger), instead.
For the time being I am using a commercial resin based pruning paste. But soon, I will start making my own, from bees wax and vegetable oil. I can try to make a video on the subject. Thanks for the suggestion.
Good job❤️
Great ❤
Thanks 🎩
Дякую!!!
Another excellent video. Thank you.
Quick question. Parallel cuts would never meet But of course they do at the apex of the wedge
You got me, Pedro😉. The cuts start in different directions, starting from the same point at the bottom. I did include the "parallel" bit, to reinforce that, at the top, they should aim roughly to the center of the tree. That way, the wedge chip separates easily and perfectly, by the growing annual rings. Afterwards, is just a matter of making a similar shape in the scion and force it downward, so it secures firmly in place and its cambium layer crosses at some point with the one from the roostock.
Ver nice
Good grafting
Nice video
Nice
What a great video, thanks J! I wonder what you think about grafting figs to mulberry rootstock. I have a 15 year old volunteer mulberry tree - male - about 8 inches in diameter at the base. could I cut that tree down to a stump and wedge graft or bark graft figs on it with the hopes of successful grafts that bear well?
I you are video thank's
👍
Wow!
Parabéns Sacadura! Excelente video! Essa técnica em cunha funciona em mangueira antiga? Tenho uma muito alta e com tronco bem largo.
Esta técnica é bastante utilizada para reconverter pomares com alguma idade, mas para árvores mais antigas, eu prefiro o enxerto em coroa. Aqui estão umas pereiras com mais de 50 anos e com troncos de bom diametro que eu reconverti com essa técnica - ruclips.net/video/b-iyXqG10YU/видео.html.
Hmm. Looks easier with the right tools as you said.. I'll sharpen the side of an old chisel, I guess that could work too.
It will do the job, for sure, but a small meat cleaver, will handle better (easier to remove after insertion) and will probably feel more comfortable in the hand.
great work big thanks, what's the name of pruning paste? Can I use mud instead of the pruning paste!
Thank you very much I.ll try this with my fig trees
Hi. The wood of fig trees is usually a bit soft to use this grafting technique. You can try it, but even if it takes the graft might dry out after a while. This happens because large diameter branches are not a good place to place grafts, in fig trees, as these tend to remove sap from those areas quite quickly when they are cut. I prefer to graft younger branches that grow after the cut, using whip and tongue or chip-budding.
A lot of people simply root fig branches. Have you seen that done?
@@nutgrower2957 It takes longer to form a tree, though. Grafting on an adult fig tree gives you more wood faster.
@@Ariel_Asker Good point!
@Emmanuel Imbert is right. And if you have limited space and can only have one fig tree, grafting allows for more than one variety in the same tree, like I show in this older video - ruclips.net/video/h4KLedsCSK4/видео.html
After you apply the pruning paste, how do you protect the newly grafted tree?
Muito bom! 👌 Tenho só uma questão. Para este tipo de enxerto podemos usar garfos com mais de 1 ano de crescimento e aproveitar o facto de terem um diâmetro maior para acelerar o processo de crescimento do mesmo? Muito obrigado pela partilha!
Sim, podemos usar garfos com madeira de dois anos, mas corremos o risco da percentagem de enxertos com sucesso seja mais baixa. Se tivermos acesso a garfos vigorosos de um ano é sempre preferível optar por estes.
Would you recommend wedge grafting in late winter, or bark grafting in spring, for an established 23-year-old Kousa Dogwood tree?
Very interesting video. Will this only work on fruit trees? Would it work on a hawthorn tree?
👏👏👏👏👏from TÜRKİYE..
can you recomend a place where i can buy the parafilm for grafting?, i’ve seen a few on amazon but sure about the quality or if its the right one, thanks
Which solution or paint we can used to apply on cuts
¿No es necesario atar el injerto?
Gracias. Un saludo desde Extremadura
Hola, Jeronimo. En este tipo de injerto, la cuña, cuando es bien hecha, queda tan sólida que es incluso difícil de retirar la púa. Por eso, en la mayoría de las situaciones en que se utilizan púas de madera dura, no es necesario atar el injerto.
👍 👏
👍🏻
What is the pruning paste made off?
You are top
😚😚😚 thanks friends i like 😘
Fire
Замечателтная работа,сам пользуюсь всеми методами прививок,и продолжаю учиться,один вопрос,замазка которой вы пользуетесь ,что это,можно ли сделать самому,или где купить как называется????
Pensé que introduciría un poco más la corteza del injerto y no enrasarla con la corteza del portainjertos,
por juntar algo más con el cambium o existe así contacto ? Lo digo porque la corteza del portainjertos es mucho más gruesa que la del injerto, Muy buen vídeo, saludos
La púa queda ligeramente salida en la zona inferior (el corte en la zona posterior la hace avanzar cuando se inserta). De esta forma, siempre hay algún punto arriba donde las zonas de cambium hacen contacto (el punto donde se cruzan). La unión comenzará precisamente en ese punto.
Sir, I am from Bangladesh. and i am your big fan. Because i see most of your fruit cuutin video. i am a student. In hobby, I have little fruit garden. I have know idea and i don't know how to grafting different fruit tree in various way and various technic. So i try to learn how to graft. Specially, roose apple, various citrus, mango grafting. Please help me sir.
Este tipo de enxerto também resulta em videiras velhas?
Excuse me, Master Sacadura, can I use Wedge Grafting in early Spring?
... and what is the name of that axe for making the cuts?
Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge!
It's so hard to find a Great Master in RUclips!
You're very kind but I am only spreading my experiences. No Great Master here. Wedge Grafting is used in late winter/early spring when the rootstocks are still in dormancy and the bark is not slipping so you can't use the bark graft yet. If the weather is hotter and the bark is slipping its easier to use the bark graft (I have several videos on that grafting technique). That' small "axe" is a local tool that you probably won't find elsewhere, but any small meat cleaver or heavier meat knife will do the same job.
@@JSacadura Thank you Thank you Very Much for your invaluable advice!
@@JSacadura Is this technique useful for grafting walnuts in winter? Thanks
I found the answer 😀: I usually prefer to graft walnuts a bit later (May), so I don't use it on walnuts. I prefer Modified Cleft (in younger trees) or Inlay Bark Grafting (when changing varieties in older trees), nailed to the rootstock to avoid graft failure from sap pressure (I also "bleed" the sap before the graft so it doesn't "drown").
What is use pasting in stock?
Hi there, I am doing a course and this method in my text book is called top working grafting, does that means, wedge and top grafting are the same? thanks in advance
How to make pruning past.
It's on my to do list. Thanks for the comment.
I love fruit trees especially figs tree and I learnt a lot from you and now I have much more successful works.
What chemical you used with brush?
🌿🌿👍👍👍
Good i from Indonesian
What paste you are using to cover the wounded surface? Shall I use enamel paint?
I was also wondering about how to make the pruning paste.
Try natural, try honey.
I would try with my Big old failed rootstocks...
Good luck with those grafts.
Can this grafting technique be used on pecan?