Archimedes Plutonium wrote in message ...
I do not know if anyone has tried this before and been successful. Next
year I am giving it a try because green-ash is abundant but white-ash is
rare here. I am going to try it on a white-ash cultivar of
autumn-purple.
I realize they are different species but as in the case of the animal
world or cross species hybrids. So I would think that the plant kingdom
would be more "plastic" as to cross speciation than the animal kingdom.
And since greenash and whiteash are so much alike, I would hazard to
guess that it is not a 100% failure to graft.
BTW, has anyone designed a honeylocust cultivar that is reddish leaves
in color? Instead of the Sunburst yellow leaves, I am looking for the
red leaves.
Archimedes Plutonium
www.archimedesplutonium.com
www.iw.net/~a_plutonium
whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots
of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies
Desirable White Ash (Fraxinus americana) varieties are often
propagated by budding on Green Ash (F. pennsylvanica) rootstock. See
an article on "chip budding", a useful technique for this form of
propagation in cold-winter Midwest locales, at
http://ianrpubs.unl.edu/horticulture/g1518.htm
There are some coppery honeylocust varieties, but no really red ones.
Bright red fall color comes from anthocyanin pigments, which
honeylocust doesn't produce (at least not in sufficient quantity to
make a show).
--
Chris Green