Best time of year to cut off sacrifice branch?

Shibui

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Is that a sacrifice branch or a sacrifice trunk?
It does not seem to matter what time of year you prune a Chinese elm I assume that's what this is?
Where do you plan to cut this time?
 

Potawatomi13

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Unless shading out needed part of tree, personally wait until after growth harden off for any added trunk growth it might add;). Unless developing Literati your tree needs ALL trunk growth possible to get😂.
 

rockm

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Brian's right. The "right" time to cut off a sacrifice branch/trunk chop, etc. is when it has finished doing the job it's being sacrificed for--is the trunk diameter big enough for what you want to do. etc.? That is the question--if it has done that job, then it's time--the work can be done on a chinese elm now, or into the summer. Early spring is the best, as that gives time to heal the wound before winter dormancy.
 

LindaPat

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Well, the trunk is not big enough. But if I cut soon, won’t it stimulate lower branches that maybe I can develop while growing another sacrifice branch?
 

Shibui

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Well, the trunk is not big enough. But if I cut soon, won’t it stimulate lower branches that maybe I can develop while growing another sacrifice branch?
This is the way I prefer to develop bonsai trunks.
You can continue to grow and chop a many times as you want with or without sacrifice branches.
Regular chop and grow seems to give me much better taper and bends with smaller scars.
Even if it takes a little longer to get to the desired trunk thickness it will take years off the following stage of branch development and refinement.
 

Brian Van Fleet

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Well, the trunk is not big enough. But if I cut soon, won’t it stimulate lower branches that maybe I can develop while growing another sacrifice branch?
First things first…what is your vision for the tree? A quick Google search will show many different styles. If you want a big fat trunk, you need big fat growth, no chopping. If you want a literati, it might be time to pick a new leader. At the end of the day, Chinese elm are forgiving and easy beginner trees, so you won’t get too far astray.
C68A162B-A876-4AC2-BADB-0F2305DAF9D7.jpg
 

LindaPat

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First things first…what is your vision for the tree? A quick Google search will show many different styles. If you want a big fat trunk, you need big fat growth, no chopping. If you want a literati, it might be time to pick a new leader. At the end of the day, Chinese elm are forgiving and easy beginner trees, so you won’t get too far astray.
View attachment 432409
I don’t think I even yet have first limbs, but something like third from the left on the bottom row would be good.
 
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