Thank you for the clear and concise explanation. I have a valued peach tree that has been badly injured at its base, and I intend to help it out with these techniques.
This is so helpful, looking at repairing vole damage where my apple and pear trees have been girdled. Rare to find the results and see the old bridge grafts fusing together, very cool to see.
Hello! Nice work protecting old orchards and bridge grafting - thank you for sharing! We are waiting for an update video showing how do the bridge grafts develop further :) please, pretty please! :)
Witam szczepienie mostowe super sposób,u mojego taty są jabłonie ponad stuletnie Reneta Kulona,Reneta Piękna z Boschob,także mają podobne problemy mam zamiar je uratować,oczywiście pozyskałem zrazy i je zaszczepiłem,teraz rosną w moim ogrodzie,to moje hobby które daje mi satysfakcje,pozdrawia Daniel z Kaszub...
Very cool. I wonder if there is a way to use bridge grafting to span between two limbs of a trunk split. Obviously the main enemy is going to be wind moving the limbs around, but I wonder if anyone has tried it.
That’s cool! Has anyone ever tried that on an American Chestnut tree? Wish I would of known about this when I was a teenager. My grandmother had American Chestnut trees in her woods that kept growing trees from the old roots of the dead American Chestnut trees and they would grow to the top of the canopy and then the blight would get them. I would of tried bridge grafting the swelling at the base to see if I could of kept them alive longer.
not sure if sarcastic or not. I mean, you can take a clone of the parent tree and preserve it for another 200 years. We're always making better varieties
This is great! I was looking for how I should graft my apple tree! Now I know what to do
Thank you for the clear and concise explanation. I have a valued peach tree that has been badly injured at its base, and I intend to help it out with these techniques.
This is so helpful, looking at repairing vole damage where my apple and pear trees have been girdled. Rare to find the results and see the old bridge grafts fusing together, very cool to see.
What a neat process. I particularly liked the attempted basketweave repair of the trunk damage.
Hello! Nice work protecting old orchards and bridge grafting - thank you for sharing! We are waiting for an update video showing how do the bridge grafts develop further :) please, pretty please! :)
Witam szczepienie mostowe super sposób,u mojego taty są jabłonie ponad stuletnie Reneta Kulona,Reneta Piękna z Boschob,także mają podobne problemy mam zamiar je uratować,oczywiście pozyskałem zrazy i je zaszczepiłem,teraz rosną w moim ogrodzie,to moje hobby które daje mi satysfakcje,pozdrawia Daniel z Kaszub...
Thank you!
Fantastic work.
Very cool. I wonder if there is a way to use bridge grafting to span between two limbs of a trunk split. Obviously the main enemy is going to be wind moving the limbs around, but I wonder if anyone has tried it.
Ваў, на русскоязычном ютубе такого не найдешь. Шикарно!
That’s cool! Has anyone ever tried that on an American Chestnut tree? Wish I would of known about this when I was a teenager. My grandmother had American Chestnut trees in her woods that kept growing trees from the old roots of the dead American Chestnut trees and they would grow to the top of the canopy and then the blight would get them. I would of tried bridge grafting the swelling at the base to see if I could of kept them alive longer.
Very impressive use of this technique.
great work. thank you for sharing
cool technique, glad to see people saving the heritage and heirloom trees, a worthwhile use of tax dollars.
not sure if sarcastic or not. I mean, you can take a clone of the parent tree and preserve it for another 200 years. We're always making better varieties
Very nice information.
hi nice vid. what was the yellow stuff you used ?
Very Cool! Great video!
Nice 👌
Bridge grafting first time I heard this
what is that yellow paste @ 3.43
wax
Looks like Doc Farwell's Grafting Seal
@@aezram Very Kool!!! Thanks!!
Most do just fine and healing in on their own.....some do better when not interfering.