Powelly said:Anyone know of a step by step guide for multiple root stock?
I googled for about an hour and was unable to find one with pictures
https://youtu.be/WSwTCwlhFgo?t=214
Powelly said:Anyone know of a step by step guide for multiple root stock?
I googled for about an hour and was unable to find one with pictures
Powelly said:Got it, looks pretty easy
I'll give it a go
Right, you are. However, still seems to be all about trees, as opposed to plants and the like. Makes a big difference. It also doesn't seem to be very easy, ha.floricole said:this is call -> MULTIPLE ROOTSTOCK TECHNOLOGY or (double rootstock)
just google for it
That's how you graft one plant to an entirely different rootstock. Which is common for fruit trees and the like. The outcome is a single rootstock.floricole said:
for the second root I suggest you to do a wedge cut
https://web.extension.illinois.edu/smallfarm/downloads/50570.pdf page 45
RaelThomas said:Right, you are. However, still seems to be all about trees, as opposed to plants and the like. Makes a big difference. It also doesn't seem to be very easy, ha.
maybe with this drawing you will understandRaelThomas said:That's how you graft one plant to an entirely different rootstock. Which is common for fruit trees and the like. The outcome is a single rootstock.
This is what I figure. Well put.Hybrid_Mode_01 said:Grafting roots onto a plant to achieve disease or pest resistance is one thing. Under pressure, the susceptible root system will succomb to environmental stress leaving only the resistant roots. That makes sense. But grafting on a second root system in order to achieve a plant with two functioning root systems probably won't achieve anything besides setting the plant back.
A healthy plant represents cooperation between properly proportioned root and shoot systems. Just because a plant suddenly has 2x the roots doesn't mean it will have the photosynthetic potential to maintain or benefit from all those extra roots. Assuming the graft takes, the plant will still only have the same amount of energy production from its leaves as it normally would have had with only one root system. So until the plant is once again happy with its root/shoot ratio, root growth will stall until shoot growth has a chance to catch up.
Think of it like running a gas engine. You need a proper mix of gas and air to run properly. Just adding more gas won't get you far. You'll just choke it out. Adding more air won't help either - it will run lean and probably stall.
Plants pretty much know what they're doing in this regard. Just plant it in good soil and make sure it gets enough light, water and nutrients.
floricole said:Today was the time to try it. The stem is about 1/16 inch. (0.078. 3mm) diameter
those are Gorria pepper, I keep #1 As a comparison plant
#3 head will be remove
Will see in a week if I have success ...
You will need etiolated plants, long enough under the cotyledons to be able to do it.lek said:
I will try with Thai yellow pepper too but I will put each root in their own container.
`This was an interesting thread, anybody have an update?lek said:I will try with Thai yellow pepper too but I will put each root in their own container.
unfortunately I can not say if it's worth it.The_NorthEast_ChileMan said:`This was an interesting thread, anybody have an update?