I know next to nothing about pruning Pines. I've read that you can prune Japanese Black Pines in any way you like, but I can't find anything about how pruning affects Tanyosho Pines.
Has anybody any advice about this? We have one that's started to grow quite vigorously, but it's quite dense & I feel it might take on more character if I pruned out a few of the branches. Here's what it looks like at present -
Pruning a Tanyosho Pine?
Moderators: whis4ey, George Nesfield
- George Nesfield
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Hi Herb,
With that thickish trunk you can certainly do something with it ,I would get into it and sort out the branches, if you can get a photo on actually showing exactly where the branches are we can maybe do a bit of judicious prunning, as my bottom line says anyone who never made a mistake never made anything.
George.
With that thickish trunk you can certainly do something with it ,I would get into it and sort out the branches, if you can get a photo on actually showing exactly where the branches are we can maybe do a bit of judicious prunning, as my bottom line says anyone who never made a mistake never made anything.
George.
Anyone who never made a mistake never made anything
Hi George,
I soon found, after I stuck my arm in it to see which branch was which, that 'densiflora' (assuming it means 'really densely foliaged') describes Tanyosho Pines very accurately.
The only way I could get a picture that showed much of the branch structure was to remove a lot of the growth, especially small growth & branches on the inside that were crossing and overlapping - so I did.
Here's the result. Do you think it's on the right lines? I hope I didn't overdo it.
Herb
I soon found, after I stuck my arm in it to see which branch was which, that 'densiflora' (assuming it means 'really densely foliaged') describes Tanyosho Pines very accurately.
The only way I could get a picture that showed much of the branch structure was to remove a lot of the growth, especially small growth & branches on the inside that were crossing and overlapping - so I did.
Here's the result. Do you think it's on the right lines? I hope I didn't overdo it.
Herb
- George Nesfield
- Posts: 766
- Joined: Jul 15, 2002 8:00 pm
- Location: United Kingdom
- Contact:
- George Nesfield
- Posts: 766
- Joined: Jul 15, 2002 8:00 pm
- Location: United Kingdom
- Contact:
George,
I've removed the spindly little branches. (Discovered that when they said 'no gardening' they meant 'no heavy lifting'.)
Here's how it looks now - your advice was spot on. As the next step, I think I'll try to make the ground round the Tanyosho tidier & make the circle of fallen needles a bit bigger.
Bert
I've removed the spindly little branches. (Discovered that when they said 'no gardening' they meant 'no heavy lifting'.)
Here's how it looks now - your advice was spot on. As the next step, I think I'll try to make the ground round the Tanyosho tidier & make the circle of fallen needles a bit bigger.
Bert
- George Nesfield
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- Joined: Jul 15, 2002 8:00 pm
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hi Bert,
It is hard to see from the photo but can you get in and thin out some of the needles to give your pine some branches, how about wiring some of the bottom branches straight (The idea is to make it look like a tree not a shrub ) which it does at the moment.
George
It is hard to see from the photo but can you get in and thin out some of the needles to give your pine some branches, how about wiring some of the bottom branches straight (The idea is to make it look like a tree not a shrub ) which it does at the moment.
George
Anyone who never made a mistake never made anything