Difficult Ash Project (aka too much sentimental value to throw away)

TrevorLarsen

Shohin
Messages
437
Reaction score
726
Location
Salt Lake City, Utah
USDA Zone
7a
This tree is basically the first tree I ever put in a pot. I dug it in my yard. Here it is in April 2021IMG_6139.png
I didn’t know what I was doing and planted it in pure peat moss so a large chunk of the trunk rotted away. Repotted it in akadama but used the same pot until today April 2024IMG_6097.jpegIMG_6096.jpeg
Today I got wild and thought I saw something very cool once I started bare rooting. IMG_6102.jpegIMG_6110.jpegIMG_6121.jpegIMG_6120.jpegIMG_6122.jpegIMG_6131.jpegIMG_6130.jpegIMG_6129.jpegIMG_6128.jpegIMG_6133.jpeg
IMG_6135.jpeg

Pleae let me know what you think, I am actually excited about the future of this tree now. It’s too bad I am losing the windswept look it had going since that branch is pointing straight at the front now, but that crazy trunk with all that character won me over. I am sure I’ll do some carving to improve things but I think it’s pretty good lemonade out of this lemon.
 

RKatzin

Omono
Messages
1,409
Reaction score
1,765
Location
Grants Pass, Oregon, USA
USDA Zone
7
I like lemons! I'd guess that's a Gray Ash or Mt Ash in your area. There's about sixteen species of Ash in the US and Canada. Here in Oregon I have Fraxinus latifolia, Oregon Ash. I have found them difficult as singular trunk trees, but perform nicely as multiple trunk, clump, or forest plantings. If you chop that trunk (if it responds like latifolia) it should sprout a lot of new shoots to work with.
Ash was the favorite tree for arrow shafts. The Natives here would chop an Ash low and the next season it would grow many long straight shoots. Also one of the best trees for a good stout walking stick.
 

Lorax7

Omono
Messages
1,457
Reaction score
2,196
Location
Michigan
USDA Zone
6a
Here in Oregon I have Fraxinus latifolia, Oregon Ash. I have found them difficult as singular trunk trees, but perform nicely as multiple trunk, clump, or forest plantings.
Why do you consider them difficult as singular trunk trees? What, specifically, is the difficulty with a single trunk ash that you don’t encounter with a group planting? The reason I ask is because I have an ash (single trunk) and would like to know the nature of the pitfalls.
 

RKatzin

Omono
Messages
1,409
Reaction score
1,765
Location
Grants Pass, Oregon, USA
USDA Zone
7
It's mostly the compound leaf is difficult to reduce in the single trunk trees, but they do better, or it's not as big an issue when they're a little cramped together in a forest. Or if the trunk is double or triple or grown as a clump they seem to dwarf each other and the leaves come smaller on older wood. However, new growth always reverts back to full size.
 
Top Bottom