Check it out:
We’re #1 in the “Vegetables” section! Howdya’ like that?
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Check it out:
We’re #1 in the “Vegetables” section! Howdya’ like that?
Pre-order now for your Kindle – the full book is almost here, just in time for fall gardening. You’ll love it.
2 comments
David,
I have always been inspired by your starting fruit trees from seed. Do you think if I sprouted a seed and then took a cutting while still young and then grafted it to a mature tree, I could avoid the long wait for fruit? Or will the cutting still know it was immature? Thoughts?
In some cases, yes – particularly if you graft apples or probably pears onto a dwarfing root stock. In other cases, such as citrus or mulberries, no, probably not. The good news is that some trees produce from seed really quickly, like chestnuts and peaches. I’ve also had a dwarf pomegranate fruit in about two years from seed.
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