I've noticed that year on year, the same elderberry trees can be relied upon to produce heavy crops of good quality fruit whilst others either produce lots of leaf and little fruit or else produce scrawny little bunches that are hardly worth picking.
For sure some of this will be down to soil type, moisture levels and the amount of light available but a fair bit of it seems to be down to the genetics of the individual tree.
With that thought in mind, I just had a look on the net and found this on a US site:
Now it might take a few years but the prospect of cloning the very best local trees and spreading them about a bit locally does have a certain appeal.
For sure some of this will be down to soil type, moisture levels and the amount of light available but a fair bit of it seems to be down to the genetics of the individual tree.
With that thought in mind, I just had a look on the net and found this on a US site:
There is no real need to purchase elderberry plants from retailers. They grow quite well from cuttings. If you take a cuttings from 2nd year growth in very early spring and stick it in the ground where you eventually want a elderberry bush, the success rate is somewhere around 70%. That's right... if you stick 10 elderberry cuttings in the ground, up to 7 will take hold. Which is probably why elderberrys are so prolific in the wild. I don't believe it has anything to do with seeding, but rather how tender the canes are.
Now it might take a few years but the prospect of cloning the very best local trees and spreading them about a bit locally does have a certain appeal.