View Single Post
  #11   Report Post  
Old 09-05-2011, 04:39 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Jake Jake is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2011
Posts: 795
Default Advice About a Possibly Mutant Acer Please

On Sun, 08 May 2011 14:35:41 +0200, Emery Davis
wrote:

On 05/08/2011 12:14 PM, Jake wrote:
So I'm at a loss; the only thing I can think of is that there are
actually two grafts but that seems daft.


It certainly is possible to do multiple grafts on the same understock,
some specialists do so but it's not current practice in the trade. Too
expensive to do in volume.

It's unlikely that any mutation like a witch's broom would give such
vigorous growth as you see. And besides it would probably be red, I've
never heard of a red tree throwing a green sport. (Not to say it's
never happened, of course).

I can't see where the grafts are in the picture, but most likely the
grafted part was dying and so the understock went.

I'm currently tempted to waste it and get a new one but I wonder
whether it's worth chopping all the green out and seeing what happens
first - it'll look like one silly tree though.


If you chop out the green it will likely die. Still those are some
unusual looking leaves, not sure I've seen such rounded lobes before.
At first glance I wouldn't even identify that as A. palmatum! Might be
worth saving.

-E

Thanks to emery's answer in another thread, and having decided the old
thing wasn't worth saving (I'd found out that the original "imported
from the Netherlands" was actually "imported from China via the
Netherlands") because I couldn't identify the rootstock and had
nowhere to plunge it and see (as Dave suggested), I've bought a Garnet
variety which fits nicely. The container allows me to provide the
right "soil" conditions and it's in full sun and sheltered from wind.
Managed to find a nice one for under £20.

http://www.rivendell.org.uk/gallery/...?album=6&pos=2

Thanks again for all the advice.

Jake