Great fun watching nothing turn into something..
Thanks for the inspiration R3

I think the results I’ve seen so far show the stem cutting has produced marginally better results but, like I said I’ve only repotted about half a dozen of these so far which is a pretty small sample size. If my seedlings come through this year I’ll most likely do both methods again... I might even trial another technique I’ve been reading about depending on how many I have to play with.Miikeboyle wrote: ↑August 4th, 2019, 8:35 pm So did you find the stem cutting trees that much better than the root trimmed ones that you would next time do all stem cuttings? Or was it close enough that you would just trim the roots next time?
Hi John, thanks for your comments! I have wired a few already and once the roots get solid I’ll put some on these ones too... a lot of the information I’ve read has wire going on at the end of year 2 but if I wait that long these will be too thick to get much movement. I’ll need to get in earlier than that.
Thanks both MJL and TimS for the kind words. Tim, I think you might be the same as me... there is a lot of satisfaction I take from growing something from essentially nothing and developing it into something impressive. I haven’t quite got there yet but I am motivated by the potential that is emerging. I see something similar happening with your maples. Keep at it (I’m pretty sure you will)!