BUDDING AND GRAFTING 



other work is scarce. After the grafts are made they are 

 stored away in a cool cellar, and usually covered with sand 

 until the following spring, when they are set out in the 

 nursery row. A temperature of about 35° to 40° F. is 

 required for storing the grafts. In tongue or whip grafting 

 the cion usually bears from three 

 to four buds. The number of 

 buds, however, is also determined 



It by the section of the country in 



which the grafting is done. When 

 L" root grafting is performed in the 



K northern sections where winter 



killing is apt to occur, sometimes 

 « long cions taken from trees that 



% are acclimated to that region 



^ are used. Cions eight or ten 



inches long are used in these 

 regions because they can be 

 planted deep, and roots will 

 finally develop on the cion. In 

 such a case if the stock of the 

 graft is winter killed the plant 

 will still grow. The piece of 

 root on which the grafting is 

 done acts as a temporary sup- 

 port and aids the plant to get 

 started. 



Saddle Graft. — Saddle graft- 

 ing is usually employed upon 

 herbaceous plants or plants 

 that have thick fleshy tissue 

 like the cacti. It is very con- 

 venient for grafting small plants. 

 In making the saddle graft the 

 cion is split near the middle. The stock is then cut 

 wedge-shape by two draws of the knife, and the cion 

 fitted over the wedge and secured in some way. In the 

 grafting of cacti by this method it is the common practice 

 to use one of the spines to hold the two parts together. 



Fig. 42. — A root graft after 

 one year. Note the union in 

 the longitudinal section. 



