Pines or firs, which are the normal Christmas trees, cannot be propagated from a branch.
Most trees except for palms can grow from an air layered branch.
yes
leaves.
At the tip of the branch. :-)
One can root a tree branch using the air layering technique. This involves applying a rooting hormone to a branch to make it grow roots while still on the parent tree.
Pines or firs, which are the normal Christmas trees, cannot be propagated from a branch.
Yes, graft a pear branch to an apple tree or an apple branch to a pear tree.
Essentially, they climb up the trunk and find a branch. As they grow around the branch, the branch itself continues to grow outward, and the vine is pulled away from the trunk.
If you get it by cutting a branch of a old fig tree it will grow fruit the first year.
To get more sunlight
If the branch of trees has been cut then it will tends to grow but if trunk is comletly cut the it will never will grow
Not likely. Some trees species, such as cottonwoods, willows, and aspens, will grow if a section of new spring growth on a branch is removed and placed in soil. The branch piece will grow roots and grow into a tree. Cottonwoods are known to reproduce this way when ice chunks in the river break off parts of the branches and the pieces take hold and grow farther downstream.
Yes, you can. From as little as a branch tippet with a few leaves attached.
Yes, but only if you graft three different varieties of apple branch onto the original tree.
It is not a species of tree- it is a tree that has a small hollow where a branch died. Where branches grow, it leaves a round marking in the grain of the wood- a "knot". If the knot falls out, you have a knothole.