Bonsai Noodles
Mame
Quick note: this is niwaki, but with everyone's horticultural knowledge here, I hope I'll find some answers.
I bought an "Oregon Green" Austrian Black Pine for a niwaki project (at one point, considered a trunk chop and to pot it, but I'll mess with my mugos for now). Before I transferred the tree from balled/burlap (unsure how long it was in the container) into the ground (about 3 weeks ago), I had to tease a lot of the roots/rootball out because it was in really compacted clay soil. From what I've seen, Austrian Black Pines prefer well-draining soil. I removed about 30-40% of the root ball, trying to leave roots in tact. However, I think I may have damaged the root ball because I'm not getting any needles from this year's flush of growth. No foliage was removed since I wanted to give the tree at least one/two years to recover and build a strong root system.
Is late needle hardening typical of Pinus Nigra? Or is this a sign that my tree is not doing too well? I expected some level of transplant shock, but I didn't think it would be this bad — or maybe I'm over-analyzing. On the bright side, the candles have tended to curve upward, even after I put it into the ground at an angle (in typical niwaki fashion). The tree is in well-draining soil (maybe too well-draining) and gets full sunlight (like 8+ hours every day).
Thanks!
I bought an "Oregon Green" Austrian Black Pine for a niwaki project (at one point, considered a trunk chop and to pot it, but I'll mess with my mugos for now). Before I transferred the tree from balled/burlap (unsure how long it was in the container) into the ground (about 3 weeks ago), I had to tease a lot of the roots/rootball out because it was in really compacted clay soil. From what I've seen, Austrian Black Pines prefer well-draining soil. I removed about 30-40% of the root ball, trying to leave roots in tact. However, I think I may have damaged the root ball because I'm not getting any needles from this year's flush of growth. No foliage was removed since I wanted to give the tree at least one/two years to recover and build a strong root system.
Is late needle hardening typical of Pinus Nigra? Or is this a sign that my tree is not doing too well? I expected some level of transplant shock, but I didn't think it would be this bad — or maybe I'm over-analyzing. On the bright side, the candles have tended to curve upward, even after I put it into the ground at an angle (in typical niwaki fashion). The tree is in well-draining soil (maybe too well-draining) and gets full sunlight (like 8+ hours every day).
Thanks!
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