I think they are attached, but I'll get a closer look the next time I trim a few extra branches off.White! Kinda looks like two trunks on the first photo. Are these attached?
DSD sends
Haha, I killed my first entry, so maybe brave isn't the only way to describe this course of action.You must be one of the really brave ones!
Yes, the least bad of options. I remain mystified that people acquire trees and then want to change them drastically rather than shopping for what they want.... "Give me the black one, and a bucket of white paint..."If you really want to get rid of the twin trunks, I would sacrifice one to keep the other. Prune away the one you don't like and just let the roots of that one die.
The root systems will be 100% intertwined. If you want to separate, both will lose 50% of their roots. You will have to raw the root ball straight through the middle. And half of the roots in each part will belong to the trunk that is in the other half. If this wasn't a 5 year competition, I may consider doing that if I had these plants, and do it next spring. And then grow out those trunks in full ground for a couple of years. And then look at them and if I want to pot them up.
On a 5 year clock, you are probably better off keeping them together.
Thanks for the replies! It actually looks like the two trunks are separate at least at the soil line.
I'm thinking to take this out of the nursery can, separate the trunks, and repot with just enough root work to separate the trunks in early August. Is that a high risk, since most days are still 90 degrees here.
Then I'll sketch out the structure as suggested.
I think for me (and a lot of newer hobbyists), I don't have the experience to correctly estimate how much work and time it will take to bring a tree to its potential AND what that max potential is. Given enough time, most trees (of species that respond well to bonsai techniques) can probably be made into something nice - not show winning, but pleasing to look at. But I lack the experience to know the difference between a tree I see at the nursery that has a pretty straightforward path to looking good in 5-10 years vs. the one that I see that looks better right now (maybe it has a thicker trunk or something), but actually it needs more time and work because the roots are a mess and there is a big taperless section that needs to be chopped and regrown.Yes, the least bad of options. I remain mystified that people acquire trees and then want to change them drastically rather than shopping for what they want.... "Give me the black one, and a bucket of white paint..."
Yikes!I strongly recommend sacrifice the unwanted extra trunk, cut it off flush to the ground, then in spring do your repot. Even in ideal conditions, when you have separate trunks this root bound together, attempting to separate them often results in deaths of both.
I've killed many florists azalea that were 2 to 5 trunks per pot. Separating them often was fatal to all trunks. Just cut off unwanted trunk, and over time, 2 or 3 subsequent repotts, you can tease out the dead roots.
This summer is rough. Delay repotting until spring.
But I lack the experience to know the difference between a tree I see at the nursery that has a pretty straightforward path to looking good in 5-10 years vs. the one that I see that looks better right now (maybe it has a thicker trunk or something), but actually it needs more time and work because the roots are a mess and there is a big taperless section that needs to be chopped and regrown.
3 year or 15 year project or a death sentence because I've never done it.
I'm learning a lot just from proposing ideas and listening to how poor they are.