Posted by James on May 8, 2007, 3:03 am
> jellybean stonerfish wrote:
> > On Thu, 29 Mar 2007 13:49:09 -0700, James wrote:
> > > My pet bunnies complete chew the bark around several apple trees. If
> > > I make cuttings now and stick them in the ground, is there much chance
> > > they'll root? They just started leafing. Would I be much better off
> > > just buying dwarf varieties at the nursery?
> > You could post it to alt.binaries.pictures.gardens and put a link here?
> Jellybean,
> Sticking these branches of apple wood will not in start a new tree. If it
> would,
> you would not get a dwarf tree anymore. The only choice is to hope the tree
> stays alive long enough to get some dormant (no leaves opening yet) branches
> and graft them onto a dwarfing rootstock. If grafting is not an option, then
> you
> will have to buy new trees. For goodness sakes, put some wire mesh aroung the
> trunks of all your fruit trees to prevent this occuring in the future.
> Sherwin D.
As it turned out the apple trees didn't die after all. The leaves
didn't wilt so I assume they're fine now. Some of the Euonomus did
die.
Posted by jellybean stonerfish on May 8, 2007, 5:14 am
On Tue, 08 May 2007 01:49:39 -0500, sherwindu wrote:
> jellybean stonerfish wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 29 Mar 2007 13:49:09 -0700, James wrote:
>>
>> > My pet bunnies complete chew the bark around several apple trees. If
>> > I make cuttings now and stick them in the ground, is there much chance
>> > they'll root? They just started leafing. Would I be much better off
>> > just buying dwarf varieties at the nursery?
>>
>> You could post it to alt.binaries.pictures.gardens and put a link here?
>>
>
> Jellybean,
>
> Sticking these branches of apple wood will not in start a new tree. If it
> would,
> you would not get a dwarf tree anymore. The only choice is to hope the tree
> stays alive long enough to get some dormant (no leaves opening yet) branches
> and graft them onto a dwarfing rootstock. If grafting is not an option, then
> you
> will have to buy new trees. For goodness sakes, put some wire mesh aroung the
> trunks of all your fruit trees to prevent this occuring in the future.
>
> Sherwin D.
I'm sorry. My response was supposed to be to the guy about his worm
pictures. I don't know what happened. I think I will blame in on the
software.
stonerfish
Posted by jellybean stonerfish on May 8, 2007, 5:34 am
On Tue, 08 May 2007 00:45:21 +0000, jellybean stonerfish wrote:
> You could post it to alt.binaries.pictures.gardens and put a link here?
>
> Or send it to me and I will post it for you.
> stonerfish@geocities.com
>
> If you do send it to me, put a subject with the word 'worm' in it, and let
> me know here so I will check my email. I don't check my email often, and
> have thousands of unread spams.
>
> stonerfish
Please don't leave us. I picked some little carrots the other day. There
were two or three sets of twins that grew spiraled around one another. It
was very trippy. But not near as trippy as your videos....womp womp
sf
Posted by jellybean stonerfish on May 8, 2007, 8:54 pm
ok my software is bugged. My responses are going to the wrong posts.
Bye, I am off to alt test...
sf
> > On Thu, 29 Mar 2007 13:49:09 -0700, James wrote:
> > > My pet bunnies complete chew the bark around several apple trees. If
> > > I make cuttings now and stick them in the ground, is there much chance
> > > they'll root? They just started leafing. Would I be much better off
> > > just buying dwarf varieties at the nursery?
> > You could post it to alt.binaries.pictures.gardens and put a link here?
> Jellybean,
> Sticking these branches of apple wood will not in start a new tree. If it
> would,
> you would not get a dwarf tree anymore. The only choice is to hope the tree
> stays alive long enough to get some dormant (no leaves opening yet) branches
> and graft them onto a dwarfing rootstock. If grafting is not an option, then
> you
> will have to buy new trees. For goodness sakes, put some wire mesh aroung the
> trunks of all your fruit trees to prevent this occuring in the future.
> Sherwin D.