Raymond wrote:hugh grant wrote:I think the issue here without taking regard to your technique, which i cant comment on without seeing, is that if the wire starts to bite in over time after wiring is not because you are wiring too tight but simply because the branch has grown. This just means you take the wire off again and rewire if the branch has not set. wiring has to be snug to perform its purpose and left as long as it can stay on for before it cuts in then you take it off where it is cutting in... rewire if necessary.
Cutting in wire is not necessarily because of ill technique.
Regards,
Hugh
Cheers for the reply Hugh. Could I possibly be wiring at the wrong time (as in the middle of the growing season)...

From what I know and watching wiring videos, it could be a factor but a branch or tree won't go super crazy in thickening cause of bad wiring.
Depends on the specie you got, faster growth means it will have a tendency to bite in. Slow growth will take longer like a Juniper, wired my around November 2014 and its still hasn't bite in at this time.
You got to ask yourself whether its planted in the ground vs being in a pot, pot takes longer to grow whereas ground tends to be slighly faster in development. No expert but thats what I have read around forums and articles on the net, correct me if I'm wrong
Regards
Allen