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- Oct 12, 2007
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If the thread had been struggling, I might have moved it. But the answers have been forthcoming right here, so there was no need.
Thanks,They can't have ALL the fun.
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If the thread had been struggling, I might have moved it. But the answers have been forthcoming right here, so there was no need.
If the thread had been struggling, I might have moved it. But the answers have been forthcoming right here, so there was no need.
I believe you have a budding knife for pecan growers. Used to cut and graft buds on a precise piece of bark, to add a branch where you want it.
Outstanding!If only i had the pecan plantation to go along with.Trees are loaded this year.Finally rained in Texas!I may have to start a thread that asks about the design itself. I am fascinated by this.
Edit to add: The knife in question is made as it is so that perfect squares of Pecan tree bark can be cut to enable the grafting. You cut one precise square of bark from one tree and graft it into another precise square on the tree you are enhancing.
This has been a fun exercise. Thank you Don, I love to learn.
Outstanding!If only i had the pecan plantation to go along with.Trees are loaded this year.Finally rained in Texas!
One of the[donor] squares of bark would have a budding branch in the middle of it.It would be put in place of the square that had been removed from the [recipient] tree. The budding branch would then grow with the characteristics of the parent[donor] tree but on the recipient tree. Usually done to keep characteristics from an old,dying tree or to graft soft shell pecan branches onto native hardshell trees. I watched my grandad do it as a kid.--KVLovely knife.
I'm still not sure why pecan grafting would involve replacing squares of bark? Anybody know? I don't know any other trees that do that, although cork oak harvesting is pretty specific.
Found this video on 'Patch budding' pecan trees in southern NM.
Well, I'll be.
Great find!
To the OP: does your knife have the little metal "tap" on the end opposite the blades, for popping off the bud patch?
~ P.
Fascinating, that such a specialized knife ever had a market, let alone is still produced today.
I guess "using a ruler" got old, fast?
~ P.