Saturday, October 16, 2010

Rosas grafting technique

Without the techniques of budding and would pick a few varieties of rose or rhododendron, and virtually no cultivation of ornamental fruit trees.


These two methods of propagation, closely related, they are easy to make and constitute, for the amateur gardener, a wonderful experience.


Bud grafting and scion are two ways to join, forever, parts of two different plants to form a new one.


A plant provides the root system and root stock is called, and the other, which is what we want to propagate, provided the graft. It is important to ensure that the cambium (thin green layer beneath the bark) of the foot is in close contact with that of a plectrum. The foot, usually of the same species, usually gives effect to the variety grafted onto it. The method is beneficial to plants that grow weak.


The budding is a method used to propagate roses and ornamental fruit.


Graft Roses: How is it done?


Foot plant will have one year of age of Rosa canina dog rose in October or November, for grafting from June to early September.


The buds of the variety to propagate should be plump and well-developed stems and settle in the same year.

Remove one of these rods that have several buds. Cut the leaves, leaving the petioles. The buds should only be removed from this "germinal rod" immediately before inserting them into the feet.


Cut each egg yolk on a piece of plate-shaped crust of 2-3 cm. length, leaving a thin wooden blade back. This blade is then carefully removing the bark. The bud is inserted in the foot at ground level. With knife, cut a T-shaped in the cortex. Raise it with the knife blade. Hold the tip of the petiole and slide under the bark. Tie tightly with raffia, making sure the yolk is exposed. In February or March, cut the top of the stem just above the bud.

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Saturday, October 16, 2010

Rosas grafting technique

Without the techniques of budding and would pick a few varieties of rose or rhododendron, and virtually no cultivation of ornamental fruit trees.


These two methods of propagation, closely related, they are easy to make and constitute, for the amateur gardener, a wonderful experience.


Bud grafting and scion are two ways to join, forever, parts of two different plants to form a new one.


A plant provides the root system and root stock is called, and the other, which is what we want to propagate, provided the graft. It is important to ensure that the cambium (thin green layer beneath the bark) of the foot is in close contact with that of a plectrum. The foot, usually of the same species, usually gives effect to the variety grafted onto it. The method is beneficial to plants that grow weak.


The budding is a method used to propagate roses and ornamental fruit.


Graft Roses: How is it done?


Foot plant will have one year of age of Rosa canina dog rose in October or November, for grafting from June to early September.


The buds of the variety to propagate should be plump and well-developed stems and settle in the same year.

Remove one of these rods that have several buds. Cut the leaves, leaving the petioles. The buds should only be removed from this "germinal rod" immediately before inserting them into the feet.


Cut each egg yolk on a piece of plate-shaped crust of 2-3 cm. length, leaving a thin wooden blade back. This blade is then carefully removing the bark. The bud is inserted in the foot at ground level. With knife, cut a T-shaped in the cortex. Raise it with the knife blade. Hold the tip of the petiole and slide under the bark. Tie tightly with raffia, making sure the yolk is exposed. In February or March, cut the top of the stem just above the bud.

No comments:

Post a Comment