Woody Carverton
Mame
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All my trees are container grown 2-3 gallon, good soil, very healthy, heavy foliage. After taken in all advice about transplanting , u made very clear, not a problem (use good judgement). Here's the deal, I planned on heavy wiring, thinning and refinement this month( Jan), will it be to much stress to transplant and work the tree at one time or spread it out and if so what guideline of a time frame. My better judgement tells me spread it out, pick one or the other. . No pics, had trouble trying to send earlier?, have to try another time. So if I could get your opinion Id appreciate it , thanks
You will be fine to wire, and trim the roots on those trees. Although the tree will probably survive just going at it, I would recommend that after wiring you only remove about 40% of the roots this first go around, then give it 2 full growing seasons to recover before trimming the roots into their final size. The goal is to avoid shocking the tree into producing juvenile foliage. The tree (actually a shrub but who cares about the semantics) would survive a lot of torture without dying, but producing juvenile foliage consumes nearly 75% more of the trees stored energy than mature foliage as the tree puts more energy into converting sugars to produce elevated levels of a hormone called auxin which expedites growth. That means that you will stunt the growth of your shimpaku's heavily for a few growing seasons as your tree is more worried about surviving than growing and it knows juvenile foliage is more likely to survive harsher conditions.
TL;DR : You can wire your tree and trim the roots too, just don't trim the roots more than 30-40% unless you want to stunt your growth for the next few years.