Michael Bell wrote:
Thinking about the problems of apple breeders.
The breeder selects the apples he likes, (eats them, I hope) sows the
pips and grows them. It would take some years for the seedlings to
grow into fruiting trees. The way round this would seem to be to cut
the seedlings and graft them onto the branches of a root-stock tree.
Then you might hope to get the next generation a lot quicker. But such
grafting will be a very fiddly job on stems much thinner than most
grafts. How is it done?
Michael Bell
Apples don't come true from seed, so the breeder will likely be very
disappointed
after sowing pips and waiting years for fruit.
Bowden Nursery has an excellent page on grafting, much of it for maples
but applicable to apples, too. HTH.
www.bowden-nursery.co.uk/japanesemaplespr.html
-E