I am very impressed by the fact that you have replied to virtually every query in the Comments.It helps to have your questions answered and possible solutions and to know where you have gone wrong.Youust be a very polite person.Most aren't.
Hi, at chip budding in this vid he rootstock is cut very shallow only bark, and the scionbud with wood? Works it the oppositw way too, or both cuts shallow without wood? For example navelina orange goes for me with grafting, no chipping onto trifogliata. Thanks
Hi there excellent video years ago I grew roses I did not use the t-bud I used cheap bug as I could start sooner and go later Plus water was an issue and the bark didn't sleep well it's a system that I really got to love. With Citrus what season would you recommend the budding of them with the Roses I did it from early summer to autumn
Thanks for the tutorial. Just a question though, I used chip budding in one of my fruit trees, then on a branch off shooting above that graft (on the rootstock tree) I grafted a different variety. Will this fail as there is a graft on one of the branch off shoots *above* my other Graft?
It is possible for both of them to succeed if both buds start to grow. Apical dominance could potentially stop the original bud lower down from growing.
I've been looking for trays and modules like those to propagate native pioneer trees. Good plastic HDPE or whatever it is, not that crinkly plastic that lasts a season or two. Who makes them please?
Please make a video on a training of citrus plant from day of graft to the full grown tree....means achieving 100 % result.....coz i have problem with theese grafting...some citrus grown too fast that it break down from the rootstock and some are too slow to grow....
Yes. Chip budding can be used for that. I tend to be more aggressive and graft to a lower branch so there is more opportunity for growth and so I can get more fruit of the new variety.
In areas such as California that have citrus psyllids all citrus trees planted in the open are unsuitable for use as source material for propagating citrus. What do you mean about the waiting?
The wrapping material is important. If a material such as the buddy tape shown in this video is used, it may help to avoid such a problem but it is more expensive. If a material that needs unwrapping (such as vinyl tape) is used, it is important to wait 3 or 4 weeks before unwrapping it.
Size is more important than age because citrus rootstocks tend to grow at different rates. I think you could do the graft shown in this video with a rootstock as small as 3mm in diameter. Larger rootstocks will be easier.
The graft would likely work, but the quality of the fruit may be poor. I learned the hard way that the fruit of mandarin oranges grafted to some lemon rootstocks will be of poor quality. I grafted several mandarin varieties to a lemon tree and the texture and flavor of the fruit was terrible. Some lemon rootstocks could give OK quality mandarins, but I do not think rough lemon is one of them.
You can contact them via their website: citrustreesource.com/Contact.aspx I understand that they do ship to other countries, but please note that they are a wholesale nursery and would be taking much larger orders than for a single tree.
I would like to see an economic analysis of attempts to control a plant disease once established. I don't think it has ever worked. At best, a short delay in the spread was accomplished.
Next year California will have been living with HLB for 10 years. If preventative measures had not been taken, California citrus would have already been wiped out long ago. Lessons were learned from the disaster in Florida to the benefit of California citrus. Here is a nice study of the economic impact of citrus in California: ccqc.org/wp-content/uploads/Economic-Contribution-of-California-Citrus-Industry21_rev_060418.pdf
Not so great when you call to find out if you are in the quarantine section, and they show up a couple of weeks later and tag all your citrus trees and say they will be back in a month to tear out any citrus that is infected. I always play by the rules and have a lot of time and money invested in them. They are my pets and my hobby.I am 70 and retired, too late to start over, some of my trees are 20 to 40 years old. Also they do not compensate you for your loss.
I'm sorry to hear your news. It is unfortunate that the tests that they are currently using are slow at detecting HLB. This is allowing the disease to spread without detection. I know it is not much consolation if you lose some of your trees, but because of the work these folks are doing, the disease has been spreading much more slowly than it did in Florida. If they had not been taking advantage of the lessons learned from Florida, HLB would likely be all over the state of California and your trees would be long dead by now.
I am very impressed by the fact that you have replied to virtually every query in the Comments.It helps to have your questions answered and possible solutions and to know where you have gone wrong.Youust be a very polite person.Most aren't.
Thank you! I try to answer as many comments as I can.
Thank you for such a dedicated person you are, saving our citrus industry
You're welcome!
ماشااللہ آپ کی ہر ویڈیو بہت اچھی ہے
Awesome. You're becoming The Citrus Man!
I love those rotating tables.
I love those tables too! I thought they looked cool in the video.
I love watching the professionals graft. Dan, thanks for another excellent video!
Thank you! I am glad that you enjoyed it!
As usual, great educational production Fruitmentor! Thank you!
You're welcome! I am glad that you enjoyed it!
Thank you so much.. I learn so much for your video.... After a series of failure.. One grafting of round lemon on pamelo is successful...
You're welcome! I am glad that you have found my videos helpful!
Great video .
Glad you enjoyed it
You are very helpful with new knowledge
Valuable resources, thanks for sharing
You're welcome!
Totally inspirational.
Nice video presentation Fruitmentor! - thank you
You're welcome! I'm glad that you enjoyed it!
Found the video i was looking for. Thank you.
You're welcome!
Thank you for sharing.
Hi, at chip budding in this vid he rootstock is cut very shallow only bark, and the scionbud with wood?
Works it the oppositw way too, or both cuts shallow without wood?
For example navelina orange goes for me with grafting, no chipping onto trifogliata. Thanks
Hi there excellent video years ago I grew roses I did not use the t-bud I used cheap bug as I could start sooner and go later Plus water was an issue and the bark didn't sleep well it's a system that I really got to love. With Citrus what season would you recommend the budding of them with the Roses I did it from early summer to autumn
Thank you for sharing this!!!!!!
You are so welcome!
Thank your videos , good job ...god bless you !!! 🙏🙏❤💯💯💯💯💯👍
Thank you! I am glad that you have enjoyed them!!
Hm.. interesting! My Gardinig teacher would luv this :3
i want to make nursery like this.
I love your video! Always wondering how trees are being produced before being sold at the nursery 😂. ❤
Thank you! I’m glad that you enjoyed it!!
Thanks for the tutorial. Just a question though, I used chip budding in one of my fruit trees, then on a branch off shooting above that graft (on the rootstock tree) I grafted a different variety.
Will this fail as there is a graft on one of the branch off shoots *above* my other Graft?
It is possible for both of them to succeed if both buds start to grow. Apical dominance could potentially stop the original bud lower down from growing.
Awesome bro I love it
Great video... Thank you for Sharing
Thank you!
Please, the chip budding grafting operation is practicable en an olive tree ? Thank you.
Chip budding should work fine for olives. Patch budding can be used also:
th-cam.com/video/_w051zyackM/w-d-xo.html
@@Fruitmentor thank you.
Thanks , good continuation
Thank you!
Good garft
im luking video i like.thanks
You're welcome!
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
👍😆
Thank You!
You're welcome!
Thanks for this video.
You're welcome!!
Parabéns pelo canal,tem como passar o zap para fazer perguntas.
I've been looking for trays and modules like those to propagate native pioneer trees. Good plastic HDPE or whatever it is, not that crinkly plastic that lasts a season or two. Who makes them please?
I think you should be able to get what you need here:
www.stuewe.com/products/rayleach.php
Good
Please make a video on a training of citrus plant from day of graft to the full grown tree....means achieving 100 % result.....coz i have problem with theese grafting...some citrus grown too fast that it break down from the rootstock and some are too slow to grow....
Thank you for the suggestion! I like the idea!
Can you chip bud graft on top of a tree so you can add a different fruit tree?
Yes. Chip budding can be used for that. I tend to be more aggressive and graft to a lower branch so there is more opportunity for growth and so I can get more fruit of the new variety.
Do we still have to wait to buy citrus trees? Would all citrus trees planted in the open (not indoors) need to be cut down?
In areas such as California that have citrus psyllids all citrus trees planted in the open are unsuitable for use as source material for propagating citrus. What do you mean about the waiting?
@@Fruitmentor Oh no. I want thinking of using it as a source. I only want to grow it and get fruit from it.
Well done
In which month of year we can graft it
Thank you! Here is an article that I wrote on timing:
www.fruitmentor.com/grafting-citrus-trees-best-time
Sir, do you have any citrus cocktail trees? Or do you know where can I get one?
I tried chip budding but got failed
My graft healed up but after few days it detached from the root stock
Please solutions
The wrapping material is important. If a material such as the buddy tape shown in this video is used, it may help to avoid such a problem but it is more expensive. If a material that needs unwrapping (such as vinyl tape) is used, it is important to wait 3 or 4 weeks before unwrapping it.
@@Fruitmentor thank you
You'rre welcome!
How and where can I send samples of my two little trees (on my patio)? I would like to make sure they are still healthy and do not have HLB.
You can see full information on what to do here if you think your trees may have HLB:
www.fruitmentor.com/asian-citrus-psyllids-hlb
Where can i find the long skinny pots and what are they called?
A similar pot is called "Citri-Pot". Treepots - Stuewe & Sons has similar pots.
is this different from the micro chip budding by dr skaria?
I have not been to Dr. Skaria's facility, but I suspect that the grafting there may be similar.
Hi. I 'd like to buy some trees online if it possible. I live in Belgium.thx
Hello sir i m from india.what is age for plant to micro grafting
Please answer sir
Size is more important than age because citrus rootstocks tend to grow at different rates. I think you could do the graft shown in this video with a rootstock as small as 3mm in diameter. Larger rootstocks will be easier.
@@Fruitmentor thank you sir
Can we graft kinnow(king hybrid) by this technique if we used rough lemon as root stock and kinnow as a scion???
The graft would likely work, but the quality of the fruit may be poor. I learned the hard way that the fruit of mandarin oranges grafted to some lemon rootstocks will be of poor quality. I grafted several mandarin varieties to a lemon tree and the texture and flavor of the fruit was terrible. Some lemon rootstocks could give OK quality mandarins, but I do not think rough lemon is one of them.
@@Fruitmentor if we use chip budding then what will the result???
@@RajeevKumar-lo1dd The grafting technique does not matter. The rootstock scion combination is more important than the grafting technique.
How can I get one of these plants... I live in Sargodha... It is also city of citrus... And California of Pakistan
You can contact them via their website:
citrustreesource.com/Contact.aspx
I understand that they do ship to other countries, but please note that they are a wholesale nursery and would be taking much larger orders than for a single tree.
Does CCPP ship outside US?
Yes, but it depends upon the country whether they allow it or not. You can email them at ccpp@ucr.edu.
Can these disease be rid of
Like
Traduction française fonctionne.
I would like to see an economic analysis of attempts to control a plant disease once established. I don't think it has ever worked. At best, a short delay in the spread was accomplished.
Next year California will have been living with HLB for 10 years. If preventative measures had not been taken, California citrus would have already been wiped out long ago. Lessons were learned from the disaster in Florida to the benefit of California citrus. Here is a nice study of the economic impact of citrus in California:
ccqc.org/wp-content/uploads/Economic-Contribution-of-California-Citrus-Industry21_rev_060418.pdf
why does my navel orange tree not produce any seeds, plenty of fruit no seeds.
"none to very few functioning ovules"
Here is a great article on seedlessness in citrus:
ucanr.edu/datastoreFiles/391-270.pdf
Not so great when you call to find out if you are in the quarantine section, and they show up a couple of weeks later and tag all your citrus trees and say they will be back in a month to tear out any citrus that is infected. I always play by the rules and have a lot of time and money invested in them. They are my pets and my hobby.I am 70 and retired, too late to start over, some of my trees are 20 to 40 years old. Also they do not compensate you for your loss.
I'm sorry to hear your news. It is unfortunate that the tests that they are currently using are slow at detecting HLB. This is allowing the disease to spread without detection. I know it is not much consolation if you lose some of your trees, but because of the work these folks are doing, the disease has been spreading much more slowly than it did in Florida. If they had not been taking advantage of the lessons learned from Florida, HLB would likely be all over the state of California and your trees would be long dead by now.
im hereeeee first
Merci
second!
This isn’t a how to video. It’s a commercial 👎
Sorry that you did not like that one. Is there any topic that you would like me to cover? It