January 22, 2017 | #31 | |
Tomatovillian™
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So where does the boost in scion size come from, other that the root system ? Does root stock's genetics play a role ? In effect ( as I see it ) the root stock is just a disease resistance/tolerance root , maybe a stronger root system to go with that. .
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January 22, 2017 | #32 | |
Tomatovillian™
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I am sure the root system has an affect in overall plant size to some degree but I get very large root systems with RST-04-106-T but not overly large plants. I think the DNA of the root system must affect the growth rate of the grafted plant in some way. Some varieties when grafted to some root stock takeoff like they are on steroids while others grow normally or even slower than normal. I think that may have something to do with the compatibility of the two different plants; but I am no scientist. Maybe someone with more knowledge in this field will step in and confuse me more. Just joking but I really don't have any idea scientifically what is happening with grafted plants but I am delighted that whatever it is it helps with my fusarium wilt problem. It gives me plants that last a long time in a usually healthy state leaving me time to devote myself to fighting foliage diseases and pests. Three years ago and 2 years ago I really maintained my first two plantings just to see how long I could keep them alive. I kept them sprayed and never let up on the pruning and supporting. I was surprised that I could still make fruit at the ends of plants with stems exceeding 25 feet. I believe that over half of the original plants set out the first day were still producing when they froze both years. Last year I decided that maintaining a bunch of plants with stems that long was just too much work for what you got. As any of you know eventually a plant starts putting out smaller and smaller fruit the longer the stem gets even though you still get an occasional large fruit. I decided to just stop caring for them and pull them up once my later plantings were putting out at a nice pace. I did six separate plantings last year staggered from early March through late July. At the end of the season I still had my last three plantings producing fruit but most were coming off the last two plantings near the end. I did grow out a Multifort one year just to see what would happen. The thing grew like it had a fertilizer IV pumping nitrogen into it. After watching it grow for a few weeks I could see what they meant by vegetative growth. I have never seen anything put on more suckers that fast while each growth tip seemed to jump by six inches daily. I let it develop 6 main stems and tried to keep it supported on a 7 ft tall fence. I found it too much work trying to pinch all the suckers after a week or two and started removing whole main stems and finally pulled the monster to stop it. Bill |
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January 22, 2017 | #33 |
Tomatovillian™
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I keep reading that the products of the scion are genetically the same as if the plant weren't grafted. I'm sure there's a research project in there somewhere, but I would guess that if the rootstock were especially vigorous, efficient (with water and nutrient uptake) and didn't have to contend with the challenges of a less vigorous rootstock, it would result in the rest of the plant producing more vegetatively and reproductively.
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January 22, 2017 | #34 |
Tomatovillian™
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I have a question for Bill (or anyone else with experience). When you do your grafting, how many do you make at one time? Since I'm new to this, I can either try grafting 'a bunch' and hope I'm doing it right (maybe losing the whole lot of them), OR, I could do fewer at once and see how it goes. If I lose just those few, I figure perhaps I could have some success with a little larger plants and a different approach a week or so later. What do you think?
Cheers, Adam |
January 22, 2017 | #35 |
Tomatovillian™
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I have 50 rootstock seeds and I'm doing 12 at a time. If the first 12 die I will likely practice with other varieties before trying with my rootstock seedlings again. I'm aiming for 50% success rate for my first try, but from what I have read/heard 20% is closer to the average for newbies.
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January 22, 2017 | #36 |
Tomatovillian™
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My RST-04-106-T seeds arrived. I'm not sure I need to use all of them this year.
Has anyone used year-old seed? Was there much of a decrease in germination? Jeff |
January 22, 2017 | #37 | |
Tomatovillian™
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Bill |
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January 22, 2017 | #38 | |
Tomatovillian™
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Quote:
Bill |
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January 22, 2017 | #39 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2016
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Thank you for the information Bill.
Jeff |
January 23, 2017 | #40 |
Tomatovillian™
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As a first time grafter, for each plant I want to set out, how many root stock and scion seeds should I start?
This is what I'm grappling with right now. With non-grafted plants, I was down to two starting two seeds for every plant and almost always had two seedlings to choose from at plant out time. I have plenty of scion seeds and a good number of rootstock seeds, I just don't want to have a ton of extra seedlings that have to get tossed in the compost bin. But then everyone says to expect a higher failure rate with first-time grafts. |
January 23, 2017 | #41 | |
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January 24, 2017 | #42 | |
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Usually they are in the box about a week but some of that is with the lid opened up a bit. Depending on how well they are doing and the weather they might come out much earlier or a bit later. Never used Big Boy or Better Boy as root stock but they should do fine. I think they have moderate soil born disease resistance but I'm not sure. Just for practicing any tomato will do. I used IS one time and they did great but I didn't plant them because they really don't have much disease tolerance like most heirlooms. Just checked my root stock seedlings and my scion seedlings that were planted a week earlier. The root stock seedlings have caught them and some are actually larger than my scions. Next time I may wait a full 10 days between planting them. Bill |
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January 24, 2017 | #43 | |
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The reason I ask is that I have a small clear plastic box of about 12" tall. It can accommodate about a dozen 4" pots. That should be enough for my experimental grafting intention.
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January 25, 2017 | #44 |
Tomatovillian™
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Expert grafting advise
Go to; agsyst.wsu.edu/graftingVegetables.html . Just stumbled on it in a search best advice and detailed videos I have seen anywhere.Grafting techniques, how to build healing chamber and day by day schedule on removing from chamber and more.
I think anyone could learn from it. |
January 25, 2017 | #45 |
Tomatovillian™
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That is a much better explanation than most of the others I have seen. I started out using similar techniques myself and adapted my techniques to overcome some of the problems that cropped up as I learned and practiced. I only mist my plants during the time I have to leave my chamber open while doing the grafting. I will also mist them is I see too much wilting but I try not to over do it as I have damping off problems when there is too much moisture. It is kind of a balancing act that can't be explained perfectly. It does take some practice and adapting to the conditions at the time I am grafting. During the summer when I am grafting for fall or late summer plants the conditions are usually more difficult due to heat and fluctuating humidity.
I found also that I had much better results usually by placing the stems of both side by side and making the cut through both of them at the same time. This gives a much better match for the two stems than trying to free hand make a perfect cut on the potted plants and then match them up. Bill |
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