Grafting. 
GRAPE MANUAL. 
mae 57 shows. a well- 
planting out; or, if the 
operation is performed in 
winter, before the planting 
season, it may be stored 
in the cellar, or some other 
suitable place, carefully 
packed away in sand or 
ust. 
The operation of graft- 
ing upon simple cuttings 
is Nagai in precisely 
A 
same manner. 
vented cutting is shown 
in Fig. 58. 
The grafted cutting 
should be planted ane in 
hursery rows and 
there for one season bette 
upon; in such cases, a thrifty young cane 
t some desirable point near its end. 
The graft may be either an ordinary 
reader. One 
‘ 8 
ease the layered canes should be 
separated from the parent stocks in 
the latter part of summer, and may 
be taken up in the fall like any 
other ordinary layers 
When the object of grafting is to 
they are set out for per- 
place a European variety or a 
manent vineyard planta- hybri 
¥. 
examined about once 
Pig. 58. 
Pig. 57. fe 
tion. This plan is now pursued on 
@ very extensive scale in c 
tees on a layered cane ; for instance, 
in filling a vacancy in a vineyard-row, , 
or in cases where no ~arphnnmee: 
be obtained for inserting a graft at 
the collar of an old stored to be meer 
"A 1, wound aroun 
the itn ses an excellent Tent substitute for vragen 
clay or wax ‘ i 
r 
:t re wound 
around the “ peeve ot anak ne o aad Fig. 5% 
3 : op cco should be about % ert a “Whore the 
