


I too love the smell of these pines.
SteveT wrote:Where does the time go?
This is what this one looks like now. The escape branch was removed last Autumn as it had grown to twice the height of the tree and was competing with the 'real' apex. I will create a very short jin with it once it has dried out completely.
It will be repotted in the coming weeks.
Hi Gerald,gerald randall wrote:Steve
Thanks for sharing. I notice that you are leaning more towards the same techniques and timing if JBP. Ryan Neill and most very seasoned growers of the species leans towards similar training to the JWP. I guess everyone needs to find a blend that works for them.
You make a couple of really good points which although I do them, I do not actively pay attention to them. I will now make a point if focusing in them.
They seem to heal quite well ... like jbp. I seal cuts that I don't intend to jin. In terms of timing of trunk cuts, I would do in winter and seal the cut with absorbent paper (super absorbent kitchen paper is good). I did some silly mid-summer trunk cuts in the early days and while the bleed terribly they all survived. Winter is best I think.gerald randall wrote:Steve
How have you found the Radiata recovers from a major trunk reduction? I have only done fairly minor work and was wondering if the wound from a large cut heals over. Generally with a pine, this is an issue.
Let me know of you have done anything like that and what the recovery/healing was like.