|  | 
| Fedco Scion Wood.  3.21.15 | 
|  | 
| Jonared Apple with 5 other varieties now grafted.  3.21.15 | 
I did the rest of the grafting at the Battleground place. 
Most of the scion looked good to me.  One - South Dakota - looked dead and a little mildewed, so I did not try.  One was a hybrid of McIntosh, which I did not want, so I did not try that one either.  Thought went into each choice.  No reason to grow one that I didn't choose, no idea about disease resistance, flavor, or other characteristics.
Jonared now has grafts of 5 varieties - 
Priscilla, Granite Beauty, Keepsake, Redfield, Porter. 
The unknown plum now has grafts of 
Ember, 
La Crescent, and 
Hanska.   There are 2 each of La Crescent and Hanska, making 2 4-inch scion from each 8-inch.  That plum already has grafts from 
Hollywood, Shiro, apricot seedling, and possibly, 
Toka.
 I also used left over 4-inch scion from the grafts made earlier from Ember and the Redfield apple.
Some sources list Hanska as a Plumcot.  Makes sense given its ancestry.  It might be a better choice than California - bred Pluots, which are also plum / apricot hybrids.
My prior listing and description of these apples and plums is 
here.
This time I did the initial wrap with polyethylene tape.  Then I thought, maybe that doesn't seal well enough, so over-wrapped with parafilm.
I also discovered that I can keep a jar candle burning, and dip the top end of each scion in melted candle wax, before grafting.  That seals them without the problem of potentially dislodging the graft while over-wrapping with parafilm.  It's also easily available, does not have to be specially bought.  I dipped a couple of times, each quickly, for a good seal.