Ken, its nice to see the "Holey Ron" being used. I was away for that lesson

JayC
Don't Keep us in suspenseAsus101 wrote:there is also a method to widen the nebari use a plane once you have the spread set. Sadly though its not available online, so it gives members a chance to discredit me on the issue....
That depends very much on the species Edward. These are trident maple. I have found that I can prune the roots on trident maples even further than in those photos and they will still grow new roots. When cutting roots on pines and other conifers I leave more and try to include some smaller feeder roots. I also leave more roots on Japanese maple (but not much more than this).When you prune the roots so hard do you leave any small feeder roots or does the tree grow new ones?
Hi shibui, great input into this thread as usual. I was wondering what your thoughts were in relation to Chinese Elms and this technique. I know they're hardy and can take a bit, but would you go that far with root reduction on them?shibui wrote: That depends very much on the species ...
I think it depends on the resilience and 'growbackability' of the tree. Some sprout really easily so you can cut roots and branches harder. Others do not respond as well so you need to leave more roots and more on branches when pruning.