MMJNICE
Shohin
So I picked up an primo arborvitae from my local nursery and didn't really know what to do with it till maybe 4 months later. I was staring at it an notice that it kinda looks like a deciduous tree from 50 yards away and 10 minutes later I had a perfect miniaturized tree in a pot. What I've learned do far is they are super hardy little trees I kept a rooted cutting out for two winters in a row and it's still growing,,,,and when i say left out i mean on a cold concrete slap in a 7 inch Terra cotta pot... be it very little tho.. the cutting was about an inch long if that. It may be an inch and a half now smh.. super slow growing so they are very easy to keep small. Have Relatively large trunks to hight ratios say a Quarter inch every 4 inches high and that could be a half inch to every 6 inches if you get one with a wide base. They handle root pruning like champions ,Seemingly, never missing A beat. I've re-potted from nursery stock in late spring early summer with no real detriment,,,, that is if I'm Conservative with my root pruning I might say. They have amazing thick foliage that turns bronze in cold winters under 40 degrees. Back bud Prolifically when pruned.. and they have Zero pests that I have seen so far and no fungal issues to boot. From my understanding they are fairly new to the nursery trade with the iseli company selecting a seedling from a "zmatik" thuja occidentalis in a breeding program for discovering new Tree cultivars of thuja in 2004. So I think more people should consider useing them for forest compositions root over rock and specimen plantings. I would love to see other plantings if anyone has been working with them for a while or recently. My oldest tree that I've been training is the the first picture ,,,it's been in its pot for over three years now. I just did its second repotting this spring. All the other small trees I've been training for its second growing season and have been repotted once into their current pots "Basically from nursery pots".. the largest tree has been repotted from its nursery container this spring with a conservative root reduction. They have all started pushing new growth. The tree in the nursery container i just picked up today...if you have any pictures of grafted primo stock on to regular thuja I really would love to see that one!! I've heard a few people considering that very Option and it sounds amazing!