I've got a habanero plant that I started last spring and am over wintering.
As you can see, it has no main stem above the soil (pretty sure I planted it too deep when I first got it), but instead has 15 or so stems coming out of the soil, and some of them are fairly weak.
I've been reading about different grafting techniques lately and came up with the idea of trying to use approach grafting on this guy. The basic premiss is to take some of the outer stems and graft them to some of the more sturdy interior stems. Then over time graft the interior stems against each other, where the end product is a habanero plant that looks like a pretzel gone crazy.
This is what it looks like now, before I start messing with it. Should be a fun project
As you can see, it has no main stem above the soil (pretty sure I planted it too deep when I first got it), but instead has 15 or so stems coming out of the soil, and some of them are fairly weak.
I've been reading about different grafting techniques lately and came up with the idea of trying to use approach grafting on this guy. The basic premiss is to take some of the outer stems and graft them to some of the more sturdy interior stems. Then over time graft the interior stems against each other, where the end product is a habanero plant that looks like a pretzel gone crazy.
This is what it looks like now, before I start messing with it. Should be a fun project