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Grafting fruit trees - combining two or more different trees into one - is a fun undertaking for gardeners. Here's everything you need to know about it.
When shopping for fruit trees, you will often encounter “Fruit Salad” multi-graft specimens that share genus affinity. Trees of the same genus are generally compatible when it comes to grafting.
Fruit-tree enthusiasts maximize their harvest and their space by grafting multiple varieties onto one tree.
Carefully choosing where to plant your fruit trees is just as important as selecting the right types of fruit trees to grow. And there are certain spots you shouldn't plant a fruit tree, either ...
You can also find “fruit salad” trees, which are combinations of compatible fruits of the Prunus genus, from cherries to peaches and nectarines.
Imagine one perfect fruit tree in your garden — a “fruit salad” tree where peaches, nectarines and apricots all flourish. Too good to be true? Not if you learn the ancient art of grafting ...
A “fruit cocktail tree”, also known as a “fruit salad tree,” is a hybrid tree that can produce three, four, or five kinds of fruits from the most popular varieties on the same tree.