MacSpook
Yamadori
Very nice. What mix did you go with after?
Thanks, 1-1-1 pumice, horticultural grit and clay pebbles. I also added some mycorrhizal fungi pellets.
Very nice. What mix did you go with after?
I've found them to be slow to recover. Some can be worked after a year, others need 2 years or more before sufficient root recovery for more work. Your tree has great potential so please don't rush it.Just need to be patient now and let it grow.
FANTASTIC song choice playingIn part two of this relatively recent podcast I believe Harry says he puts newly collected deciduous trees in straight pumice. I seriously could have missed something but think he said -collect, plastic bag to retain moisture, home, next morning clean field soil and into pumice. This may be a newer approach, dunno.
Makes perfect sense to me with some pine bark in there, to each..
Podcast looks like this:
View attachment 416122
A lot of inherant beauty for Hawthorn is in the gnarly, twisted branching, sometimes you can find lots of changes of direction and twists as you mentioned you saw. if possible and if its desirable you do want to try to keep some of that.I've identified a wild European hawthorn that I want to collect in the next couple of weeks. Today I spent about 2 hours trimming it down and reducing the growth to a size that I can hopefully bring home without causing too much trauma to it. I will be using a soil mix that Tony Tickle recommends for potting yamadori hawthorn and I will be closely following his care advice including the black bag method. A lot of the info I've read on collecting says get rid of what you don't need. So I'm trying to get a good balance between reduction and keeping enough of he branches for potential foliage growth to support the root system as it recovers.
Here it is before cutting back. It's not a great picture but you can see how moss covered and congested it was.
View attachment 416081
And here it is after cutting back
View attachment 416082
It's about 3 feet at the tallest point. I'm not sure about removing the branch to the right now or wait until it's (hopefully) recovered.
Mac
How's the main tree looking?
A lot of inherant beauty for Hawthorn is in the gnarly, twisted branching, sometimes you can find lots of changes of direction and twists as you mentioned you saw. if possible and if its desirable you do want to try to keep some of that.
the deed is done now, but if you look at some of the Hawthorn collected by Will baddely, Tony tickle, Harry harrington etc they dont tame them too much, Hawthorn are generally kept somewhat wild.
Also depends on tastes of course