AMERICAN HOME GARDEN. 



229 



cleft grafting, and cutting a small slice from the side an inch 

 or so below the top (Fig. 110 &), and setting the bud on as a 

 patch, fitting it with exactness, and binding it with care ; or, 

 the bud being cut out thick for the purpose, a small tongue 

 may be made in each, so that they may be more conveniently 

 bound together. In either mode, the after-treatment is pre- 

 cisely that directed for growing buds, page 225. 



Fig. 111. 



SIDE GRAFTING. 



In SIDE GRAFTING a slit is made 

 as for budding, and the graft, being 

 cut from one side only into the form 

 of a tapering, half-round wedge, is 

 inserted and bound ; or it is bound 

 on to a spot in the stock from which 

 a slice of bark of corresponding size 

 has been cut, merely fitting it on, 

 as in single-bud patch grafting, or 1\ 

 tongueing it, as in tongue grafting, 

 but shorter, deferring the heading 

 down or shortening of the stock un- f 

 til the graft knits, as in inarching*. ^/^ 



Side grafting is used chiefly for a .", inestocKpreparea , wltna ,,, 

 ornamental forest trees, upon which m budding, to receive the graft. 

 it is supposed to succeed better than ^J^tU fia^~ 



Other modes ; but it may be applied c- The graft inserted, and ready to 



to all kinds of trees, and will some- b 



times be found especially useful for balancing or giving sym- 

 metry to a one-sided tree, replacing a lost branch, etc. 



SADDLE GRAFTING. 



In SADDLE GRAFTING the stock is cut wedge form (Fig. 

 112 a), and the graft, being first split up the necessary dis- 

 tance, is pared on the inside so as to form a cleft, of which 

 each prong or lip is a tapered half-round (Fig. 112 b) ; these 

 are neatly set across the stock at one side, (Fig. 112 c), so that 

 the inner barks of graft and stock fit together to the very end 

 of the lips, and the whole is then carefully bound, as directed 



