Can you graft bud onto any legal plants?

MI Bluntsmoker

Active Member
I was thinking it could be pretty cool to just take a cutting and put it onto like a tomato or pepper plant. Are there any plants that would work with?
 
If there were plants that it would work with it would be great for all of us. But i doubt there is, at the very least, nobody seems to have discovered one. Maybe some research is in order?! lol
 

whiteflour

Well-Known Member
You can graft it onto hops or hops onto cannabis. However the hops won't have THC if that's what you're thinking.
 
imagine somehow grafting it in a way that it generates the THC in another type of fruit, eg, cherries. imagine fresh cherries that get you baked as all hell. heaven i say
 

MI Bluntsmoker

Active Member
Could the bud still grow with thc on the hops, what was originally mj still being mj and all,like a unibud stealth grow?
 

whiteflour

Well-Known Member
Yes. Grafting doesn't change the plant in any way it only shares the root system. Both plants will continue to grow harmony if you leave enough there for them to grow. Pretty much the same reason you would prune branches below the graft on dwarf citrus tree.... they'll never be true to what the plant is "supposed" to be.
 

Jut

Member
haha that would be amazing :D i recon we shud start making some sort of hybrid like try nettles and ganja first cus there the same family therefore pollenation should work if u try hard enuff
 

Dragon Gem

Member
Graft hybrids
Occasionally, a so-called "graft hybrid" can occur where the tissues of the stock continue to grow within the scion. Such a plant can produce flowers and foliage typical of both plants as well as shoots intermediate between the two. The best-known example is probably +Laburnocytisus 'Adamii', a graft hybrid between laburnum and broom, which originated in a nursery near Paris, France in 1825. This small tree bears yellow flowers typical of Laburnum anagyroides, purple flowers typical of Chamaecytisus purpureus and curious coppery-pink flowers that show characteristics of both "parents".



hehehe wiki
 

pastafarian

Well-Known Member
i think i just may have to try this now
good thread btw il let you know how it works
so do i like splice them and duct tape them together or what? any ideas welcomed
 

whiteflour

Well-Known Member
i think i just may have to try this now
good thread btw il let you know how it works
so do i like splice them and duct tape them together or what? any ideas welcomed
Yes, but you would use grafting tape. It's kind of like painters tape / teflon tape. It's porous, slightly stretchy, and self adhesive. What you do is take two plants. On the plant that will be the roots you cut a V into the stalk. On the plant that will be the growing portion you cut a wedge. Shove the two together, wrap it up, and wait.
 
Budding is a form of grafting. Grafting is the art of attaching a piece of one plant to another plant, creating a new plant. Yes you can plant graft you bud onto any legal plants

a. A detached shoot or bud united or to be united with a growing plant.
b. The union or point of union of a detached shoot or bud with a growing plant by insertion or attachment.
c. A plant produced by such union.
 

worm5376

Well-Known Member
Sounds like something worth doing for a home experiment.
Whiteflour,,, +rep. You sound like a farmer :)
 

whiteflour

Well-Known Member
Thanks. No farmer here but I did live on one until I was about 21, and worked with the forestry commission through high school.
 

BL0TT0

New Member
Here in Oregon there are limits on the number of plants you can grow. I have heard that there are growers taking 4 clones, and combining them into one huge bushy plant to get around the law. Would that be considered grafting if you used different strains? Also would it share any traits?
 
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