Apple cryopreservation at USDA-ARS NCGRP uses a winter vegetative bud method that incorporates desiccation prior to cooling. Although this method is valuable, desiccation is time consuming, requiring cutting nodal sections to exact lengths, moisture content estimates, and 1-4 weeks of desiccation. Processing sections without desiccation is being examined to improve the efficiency of handling Malus accessions. Vi-ability was estimated using an oxidative browning assay or a sprouting test. Sections from mid-winter collected scions were cooled at different rates to -30°C or -35 °C and transferred to the vapor phase over liquid nitrogen. Sections were warmed at + 4 °C and held for 24 h before testing viability. Some lines were processed after several months of storage at -3.5 °C. Although viability after cryopreservation occurred with a cooling rate of 1 °C/h, slower cooling (5 °C/day) was beneficial for many accessions. In tests with a limited number of lines, cooling rates ≥10 °C/h to -30 °C caused injury to buds and cambium. Scions stored for up to 8 months could survive cryoexposure. Scions from three lines tested survived three cycles of cooling from + 4 °C to LN. Extent of acclimation affected results. With non-desiccated sections cryogenic survival of `Golden Delicious' differed over years, but this has also occurred with the procedure that uses a desiccation step. It is not expected that this method is generally applicable to more tender species of Malus or other fruit genera, but the method has been successful with many lines of M. × domestica, a fairly cold hardy taxa, and with some other cold hardy Malus species. Grafting tests are needed to confirm the usefulness of the method