jkd2572
Masterpiece
I might be going tomorrow if you're up for it. Shoot me a PM with contact info if you're interested.
Sorry I missed this. Thanks for the invite.
I might be going tomorrow if you're up for it. Shoot me a PM with contact info if you're interested.
All 27 of the dormant elms I collected are also alive, as is the big Pyracantha.
Love that pyracantha, I would not worry about wiring it personally and rather go with clip and grow method (or pinching every 2 nodes) ...either now or next year. You'll get better and more convincing structure that way esp since they grow so fast. JMHO.
Please show us your Pyracantha done by all clip and grow Dario.
Looking good! Time to wire that pyracantha, exaggerate the movement. Once they get pinky-thick, they're tough to move.
That's quite a claim and one that, to me, requires a photo to document.I do have a tiny one (gallon sized tree-pencil sized trunk) I started working on less than a year if you really want to see (and not just to embarrass me ). Nothing much to look at but the little amount of branch it has is obviously better than if it was wired.
That's quite a claim and one that, to me, requires a photo to document.
Fine, it will be done.
Don't get me wrong, I will still wire it but mainly to reposition the branches...very little to give it the branch character and structure. I use the same technique for all my other tree's new growth...be it yaupon, boxwood, etc. Usually, they tend to look like pom-poms actually before I clean them up. Ridiculous to many but that is my chosen approach.
Dario,
You tell someone not to worry about wiring, but then admit to wiring to position the branches.
Brian is correctly advising Ross to do the exact thing at the right time to achieve what you admit to doing after saying not to do it!
You may inadvertently be causing the issue others are seeking to avoid by giving incomplete advice. I assume this is inadvertent.
Regards,
Martin
Looking good! Time to wire that pyracantha, exaggerate the movement. Once they get pinky-thick, they're tough to move.
BTW, note that the thorns of pyracantha can leaf and branch.
Ross,
This is good advice. Those shoots need to be wired into a basic structure with movement now to allow future ramification to be built on that structure.
Regards,
Martin
I started a Pyracantha air layer this mos. Should be really cool come Aug! I was wondering the preferred training method for this plant as indeed I did notice that the branches, even small ones, are quite brittle.
You have a really nice one there Ross, and I love those Elms too. Good Luck with them!
Chris
I was wondering about that. Are you saying that there is typically a dormant bud at the base of each thorn?
Thanks Fore! When you are separating the layer, watch the thorns on the parent plant. I got jabbed with one when I was hauling away the sawn off top of mine and it was a bit painful and took a while to heal.
That's quite a claim and one that, to me, requires a photo to document.
Difficult to show the branches unless I defoliate the plant sorry. This tiny plant was bought a year ago and basically chopped to almost nothing except the trunk and a few inches of branch stubs. It was originally about 3 feet tall stick with some movement at the lower part.
Note that this never got wired (yet).
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