The technique of grafting trees together has been around since humans began to domesticate plants and animals. There have been mentions of grafting as early as 2000 BCE in China, where they grafted pear twigs onto crab apple, jujube, and pomegranate stock.
Since then, grafting has become a common horticulture technique that allows plants to take on different properties such as improved hardiness and faster growth to maturity.

Of course, in order to produce a successful graft, the trees need to be compatible with each other. You cannot, for example, graft a grape vine to an apple tree and expect to produce anything.
In general, the closer two plants are genetically, the more likely the graft union will form. Artist and professor Sam Van Aken took grafting to the next level to create a tree that bears 40 different types of fruit.
