Why not? Explain this properly please... if this is the case, how do apple trees do it in the wild?you will not get the same apples as the apple the seed came from which is why grafting is needed in fruit tree production
Thanks for the link, butterfly'... it was interesting. Although it didn't really say much about growing from seed. Plenty about good genetics, etc... but this experiment of mine isn't really about genetics. 1. I just want to see if I can do it.check this out skunk Growing Apple Trees In The Home Garden
The apple will grow all of mine did,but they need much more care than MJ do.Well, i don't like to give up without trying. So, I'll give it my best shot first.
I like failing, expect to fail... hence just putting the seed straight onto the germ' plate. I'd already read that you shouldn't do this. I've found that this is the best way to learn. Know what the mistakes are, then go ahead and make them... sometimes, you just never know.
So a small root zone is perfectly capable of sustaining a much larger plant... I knew it. No need to do the experiment then.the root zone is smaller and easier to fertilizer/water. that's it.
johny apple seed did not graft but it is standard practice now and for the reasons i said erlyer, what your saying is how to make dwarf plants which is completly diffrnt do some resurch you will find the reason for grafting just as i said, thats the way it is ask a local nurserymen or do the research because grafting is used for many more reasons than creating dwarf varieties, it is done to get the same results every time, grow from seed you may get somthing edible but probably not. you graft to a rootstock of a smaller tree and you get a smaller treewhat's being said here about genetics/seeds does not really add up.
i know for a fact that they use the smaller trees for a root system and graft limbs on but they do this to cut down on the growing room they need on the farms. the root zone is smaller and easier to fertilizer/water. that's it.
grafting does not affect the genetics of the limbs or the flowers/pollen they subsequently produce. there is no genetic "drifting" between the limbs and the roots.
Johnny Appleseed did not go around grafting limbs in Washington state, he planted seeds!
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Now this really doesn't make any sense... what you're saying is that if you grafted a larger apple tree to a smaller apple tree root stock, that the apple tree would shrink?you graft to a rootstock of a smaller tree and you get a smaller tree
nope . you graft a branch from a standard tree to a rootstock of a smaller tree and that branch will grow smaller than a standard tree , it will grow more to the size of the tree the rootstock was taken frrom. not a younger tree of the same variety but a tree that natruly is a smaller tree. you can get a standard, semi dwarf or dwarf tree. so the reason for a smaller rootball is because the tree the rootstock was taken from was a smaller tree.Now this really doesn't make any sense... what you're saying is that if you grafted a larger apple tree to a smaller apple tree root stock, that the apple tree would shrink?
So the rootstock from the previous tree is pre-programmed ONLY for the previous tree size? So even grafting a larger tree branch to the smaller root stock will result in a smaller tree. Excellent.nope . you graft a branch from a standard tree to a rootstock of a smaller tree and that branch will grow smaller than a standard tree , it will grow more to the size of the tree the rootstock was taken frrom. not a younger tree of the same variety but a tree that natruly is a smaller tree. you can get a standard, semi dwarf or dwarf tree. so the reason for a smaller rootball is because the tree the rootstock was taken from was a smaller tree.