. The art of grafting and budding. Grafting. 132 THE AUT OP exceedingly short branch or eren a simple fruit-bud. It should be cut off with a strip of bark and alburnum B (p. 130) an inch or two in length attached. Care should be taken not to remove the woody part at the base ; it should be merely smoothed down so as to ensure its cohesion ; it is then inserted (at C) into the T incision in the stock (A). It should be bandaged rather tightly throughout, and the points of junction covered with clay, mastic, or the leaf of a tree, should any part of the tissues remain exposed. The bandage should

. The art of grafting and budding. Grafting. 132 THE AUT OP exceedingly short branch or eren a simple fruit-bud. It should be cut off with a strip of bark and alburnum B (p. 130) an inch or two in length attached. Care should be taken not to remove the woody part at the base ; it should be merely smoothed down so as to ensure its cohesion ; it is then inserted (at C) into the T incision in the stock (A). It should be bandaged rather tightly throughout, and the points of junction covered with clay, mastic, or the leaf of a tree, should any part of the tissues remain exposed. The bandage should  Stock Photo
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. The art of grafting and budding. Grafting. 132 THE AUT OP exceedingly short branch or eren a simple fruit-bud. It should be cut off with a strip of bark and alburnum B (p. 130) an inch or two in length attached. Care should be taken not to remove the woody part at the base ; it should be merely smoothed down so as to ensure its cohesion ; it is then inserted (at C) into the T incision in the stock (A). It should be bandaged rather tightly throughout, and the points of junction covered with clay, mastic, or the leaf of a tree, should any part of the tissues remain exposed. The bandage should not. Result of grafting with a fruit-bud. be removed before the fruit has set in the beginning of the following summer. Should there be any fruiting-spurs ready for grafting when the sap is not very abundant, it will be best to employ cleft-grafting, inlaying, or crown-grafting. On shoots and simple but vigorous branches success is mora certain in autumn than in spring, but the best time is from July to September with side-grafting under the bark. The process of veneering with strips might also be advantageously. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Baltet, Charles, 1830-1908. [from old catalog]. London, Macmillan and co.