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Pruning Weeping Cherry Trees and Other Grafted and Budded Plants
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What do the terms grafting and budding mean?
Budding is a form of grafting. Grafting is the art of attaching a piece
of one plant to another plant, creating a new plant. Grafting is
usually done because the desired plant is extremely difficult if not
impossible to propagate through other means. Dogwoods, for example, are
easily grown from seed, however, it is next to impossible to grow a
Pink Dogwood from seed. The seeds from a Pink Dogwood will produce
seedlings that are likely to flower white.
The most common method for producing Pink Dogwood trees is to remove a
single bud from a Pink Dogwood tree and slip it under the bark of a
White Dogwood seedling. This process is known as budding, and the
seedling is known as the rootstock. This is usually done during the
late summer months when the bark of the White Dogwood seedling can be
easily separated from the tree, and the seedling is about 1/4” in
diameter.
A very small “T” shaped cut is made in the bark only, and
the bud is slipped in the slot. The actual bud itself is allowed to
poke out through the opening and then the wound is wrapped with a
rubber band both above and below the bud. By the following spring the
bud will have grafted itself to the seedling, at which time the
seedling is cut off just above the Pink Dogwood bud, and the bud then
grows into a Pink Dogwood tree.
Budding is usually done at ground level, and often times the rootstock
will send up shoots from below the bud union. These shoots, often
called suckers, should be removed as soon as they appear because they
are from the rootstock and are not the same variety as the rest of the
plant. Flowering Crabapples are also budded and are notorious for
producing suckers. When removing these suckers don’t just clip
them off at ground level with pruning shears, they will just grow back.
Pull back the soil or mulch and remove them from the tree completely at
the point where they emerge from the stem.
Most people clip them off a couple of inches from the ground, and then
they grow back with multiple shoots. This drives me crazy! Get down as
low as you can and remove them completely and you will keep them under
control. On older trees that have been improperly pruned for years I
take a digging spade and literally attack these suckers hacking them
away from the stem. Sure this does a little damage to the stem of the
tree, but when a plant is let go like that I figure it’s a do or
die situation. The trees always survive and thrive.
Other plants are grafted up high to create a weeping effect. One of the
most popular trees that is grafted up high is the top graft Weeping
Cherry. In this case the seedling is allowed to grow to a height of
5’, then the weeping variety is grafted on to the rootstock at a
height of about 5’. This creates an umbrella type effect. In this
case the graft union is 5’ off the ground, therefore anything
that grows from the stem below that graft union must be removed.
Many people don’t understand this and before they know it they
have a branch 2” in diameter growing up through the weeping
canopy of their tree. Before you know it there are several branches
growing upright through the canopy and the effect of the plant is
completely ruined.
At my website, http://gardening-articles.com I’ve got a couple of
photos that show exactly what I'm talking about in this article. You
can clearly see the weeping effect that the Weeping Cherry tree is
supposed to have, but then up through the middle come these branches
that are no more than just suckers from the stem, or the rootstock as
it is known in the nursery industry.
Looking closely at the photos you can see that these suckers originate
from below the graft union. This problem could have been prevented if
someone had just picked off these buds when they first emerged on the
stem of the tree. Then they would have never developed into branches.
This tree can still be saved, but there will be a large scar on the
stem when the upright branches are pruned off. But under the canopy of
the weeping tree these scars will never show.
Another interesting plant that is grafted is the Weeping Cotoneaster.
In this case the seedling that is grown to serve as the rootstock is
Paul’s Scarlet Hawthorn, and Cotoneaster Apiculata is grafted
onto the Hawthorn rootstock at a height of 5’. Years ago a
nurseryman found through experimentation that these two plants are
actually compatible, and a beautiful and unique plant was created. I
have one of these in my landscape and we love it.
Once again since the graft union is at 5’, any growth coming from
the stem (rootstock) must be removed. In this case the growth coming
from the rootstock will be Hawthorn and will look completely different
from the Cotoneaster which is what the plant is supposed to be. The
easiest way to keep up with this type of pruning is to keep an eye on
your grafted plants when you’re in the yard. As soon as you see
new growth coming from below the graft union, just pick it off with
your fingernail.
If you catch these new buds when they first emerge, pruning them off is
as easy as that. Walk around your yard and look for grafted or budded
plants, and see if you can find any that have growth that doesn’t
seem to match the rest of the plant. Look closely and you may find that
the growth is coming from below a graft or bud union.
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