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» Willy World » Gardening Reference » Gardening in 2006 » Rooting A Certain Tree

   
Author Garden: Rooting A Certain Tree
sapphire
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Member # 9098

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I have two Flowering Pair Trees, that I purchased and planted about two weeks ago. They are doing great, just wonderful.

On one of the trees, there is a sappling that has rooted from the trunk of the tree. I was wondering if I could cut that off and root it to make another tree?

I know in some cases special products have to be bought and added to the cutting in order to activate root growth. I was just wondering if this is one of those things I will have to do or if it will root on its own.

Plants: 19 | From: Conway, South Carolina | Registered: May 2006  |  Seeded: 66.153.230.173
johnCT
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You could do that with any cutting from the tree. No rooting hormone is necessary. It will root all by itself. Just stick it in some well draining potting mix or even just right in the ground next to the tree.

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John - Zone 6

Plants: 1068 | From: Connecticut | Registered: Aug 2005  |  Seeded: 209.178.236.58
peter link
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Member # 11176

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quote:
Originally posted by sapphire:
I have two Flowering Pair Trees, that I purchased and planted about two weeks ago. They are doing great, just wonderful.

On one of the trees, there is a sappling that has rooted from the trunk of the tree. I was wondering if I could cut that off and root it to make another tree?

I know in some cases special products have to be bought and added to the cutting in order to activate root growth. I was just wondering if this is one of those things I will have to do or if it will root on its own.



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Peter Link

Plants: 1 | From: Sydney | Registered: Oct 2006  |  Seeded: 219.83.4.78
aighead
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Member # 10044

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There's also this just to make sure...
Plants: 72 | From: D-Town, Ohio | Registered: Jul 2006  |  Seeded: 72.44.4.102
myndful
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Member # 10869

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Just a thought...are your pear trees grafted or regular? If grafted, is the young sapling growing above or below the graft line?

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http://myndfulmeanderings.blogspot.com

Plants: 98 | From: Salisbury, MD | Registered: Sep 2006  |  Seeded: 71.200.93.134
Jiffymouse
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good catch myndful. that makes a BIG difference in what you get when you root the sapling.
Seeded: 72.10.76.16
aighead
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Which way is right? Graft above or below? Oh yeah, what does grafted mean?
Plants: 72 | From: D-Town, Ohio | Registered: Jul 2006  |  Seeded: 72.44.4.40
Jiffymouse
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grafted is when they take the root system of one tree, and attach the top part of a different tree to it. like adding two pieces of pipe, and the graft is the "joint".

you can tell a graft because it will be thicker than the rest of the trunk. and the trunk will almost have a "seam" in the bark. usually at a diagonal, but sometimes in a "v". if a plant has a "sucker" or off shoot from below the graft, the sucker will not be the same plant as the top of the tree. if the sucker is from above the graft it will, but it may not be as "root hardy" as the parent.

Seeded: 72.10.76.16
   

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