Japan Dan
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Hemlocks atop boulders
I'm originally from Western Pennsylvania. When I was living there, I found a lot of really nice hemlocks growing on top of large boulders. These hemlocks were quite suitable because they had a shallow root system (they were growing in their own leaf litter) and often had been knocked over by fallen trees. I found a lot of nice rafts this way. The ones that were leggy, i cut back and collected the following season. But please be careful, it's easy to fall off boulders that are covered in a carpet of moss!
They can be found, but don't look under old growth forests for them. Those hemlock get leggy looking for light. Go higher in the mountains (Southern Appalachians in my case), when you start seeing more rocks than dirt you'll find some good ones as long as its legal. Also, sides of rocky stream beds can contain some dwarfed ones. I've got a few (no pics right now sorry). you have to train them using the clip and grow method as the branches will break at the slightest bend. The best one I've gotten actually came from Warren Hill and I believe he got from a collector in NC. It's like Walter Pall says in his collecting videos, you have to find a pattern, then you'll find trees.
I'm originally from Western Pennsylvania. When I was living there, I found a lot of really nice hemlocks growing on top of large boulders. These hemlocks were quite suitable because they had a shallow root system (they were growing in their own leaf litter) and often had been knocked over by fallen trees. I found a lot of nice rafts this way. The ones that were leggy, i cut back and collected the following season. But please be careful, it's easy to fall off boulders that are covered in a carpet of moss!