Image Source: www.treeof40fruit.com
He worked with over 250 varieties and developed a timeline that showed when each fruit blossomed in relation to others. He started grafting few of these onto the root structure of a working tree. Two years later, he used the chip grafting method to add more varieties as separate branches. The chip grafting technique helped him take a silver from a fruit tree (including the bud), insert into an incision made on the working tree and tape the silver into place. This is left to heal over winter. If the branch grows well, it's pruned back so that it can grow as a normal branch on the tree.
Five years later and after grafting several branches, Aken has hist first tree of 40 fruits. The tree looks normal most of the year but during spring, a stunning patchwork of white, red, pink, and purple blossoms. These then turn into peaches, plums, almonds, nectarines, cherries, and apricots during the summer. They are all unique and rare varieties. The plant is not only beautiful: it preserves the world's diversity of stone fruit. They are grown for commercial use mostly and are selected depending on their largeness, their look and taste. This therefore means that out of hundreds of stone fruits grown all over the world, only few are commercially viable.
Aken has been able to grown 16 trees so far they can be found in museums, private art collection and community centers around the US. He picked the stone fruits inter-compatibility and diversity. He also added garlic and peppermint to keep away the deers. His plan is to grow this variety of trees in a city setting. Does he eat the fruits or what happens to them afterwards?
"I've been told by people that have [a tree] at their home that it provides the perfect amount and perfect varieties of fruit. So rather than having one variety that produces more than you know what to do with, it provides good amounts of each of the 40 varieties. since all of these fruit ripen at different times, from July through October, you also aren't inundated. Personally, i give away most of the fruit that comes from my trees," he said.
[Source: www.iflscience.com , www.new.livestream.com]
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