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Grafting Orange Trees – How to Graft a Tree by T-budding
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In this video on grafting orange trees, learn how to graft a tree by T-budding, a method of grafting trees that is very easy and that gives a good success rate.
T-budding is a common method for grafting fruit trees. It is useful not only for orange grafting, but also for grafting lemon trees and for grafting citrus trees of other varieties. This video shows T-budding used for grafting a new tree. It should be noted that the T-bud is also sometimes used as a grafting technique to change the variety of existing trees and also to make multi-grafted fruit trees.
Subscribe to this channel:
CCPP budwood ordering video:
For YouTube videos on other orange grafting techniques, please see:
Step-by-step tutorials on other methods useful for orange tree grafting:
In California, the collection of any citrus propagative materials, including budwood and seeds, from non-registered sources is illegal. Any citrus trees grown or grafted in California must come from source trees registered with either:
(1) The Citrus Nursery Stock Pest Cleanliness Program, administered by the California Department of Food and Agriculture, or
(2) The Citrus Clonal Protection Program, located at the University of California at Riverside.
T-budding is a common method for grafting fruit trees. It is useful not only for orange grafting, but also for grafting lemon trees and for grafting citrus trees of other varieties. This video shows T-budding used for grafting a new tree. It should be noted that the T-bud is also sometimes used as a grafting technique to change the variety of existing trees and also to make multi-grafted fruit trees.
Subscribe to this channel:
CCPP budwood ordering video:
For YouTube videos on other orange grafting techniques, please see:
Step-by-step tutorials on other methods useful for orange tree grafting:
In California, the collection of any citrus propagative materials, including budwood and seeds, from non-registered sources is illegal. Any citrus trees grown or grafted in California must come from source trees registered with either:
(1) The Citrus Nursery Stock Pest Cleanliness Program, administered by the California Department of Food and Agriculture, or
(2) The Citrus Clonal Protection Program, located at the University of California at Riverside.
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