First outing with inexpensive foreign grafting tool with omega head

  Have to admit I was hopeful and anxious about how this blade/tool combination worked. Sure you would get a strong graft. But the cambium layer? How would they line up?

 Well interestingly enough I noticed even if a scion/root stock mismatched; you can eyeball the cutter to make a great line up. So anyway I felt it would be sacrilegious to not do Blairmont on the first graft. And soon it was sitting in the field in a pot.

I also grafted P.1 on M111 and Kaido on M111. Both have resistance M111 does not have. And I felt M111 would bring good vegetative growth for cuttings.

Lastly I planted mother trees of G.214, M111 and P.2.

Roots on root stocks? All looked good. G.214 had plenty of feathery roots.

Can't do a lot more today. Have to get potting soil. And must take the tiller to break the compost pile up. A nearby farm has tested and graded compost soil with no added nitrogen. For a great price by the bucket{about 12 50 pound bags}

Also have to settle on my feed bags and how to best utilize them as plant bags.

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