Re: JBP - Yatsubusa advice for my pine
Posted: February 3rd, 2020, 9:33 pm
If you look closer at the yatsubusa pictures I posted you may be able to see that all the shoots are fat. That's one of the characteristics of yatsubusa but it makes it difficult to grow nice fine twigs on a bonsai. You also need to battle against the tendancy to grow so many shoots from one place. Normal black pines don't have those drawbacks.
Lots of needles can be good or bad. Bad because it makes it harder to see the tree. Good because wherever there are needles you can get new buds to grow if you need them. So if you have too many needles feel free to pull some off. Just make sure you leave a few in places where you may want branches in future. Probably doesn't matter on this tree because it already has plenty of branches not too far apart so you are unlikely to want more in between so you should be fine to pull them off.
I can certainly see the top whorl fairly clearly. It has The larger central shoot, 4 medium side shoots and maybe a smaller one I think.You could leave all those on the tree as long as your intention is eventually to cut all that section off down to the whorl below - see the yatsubusa photo with my fingers. that dead section was once a trunk with a whorl of branches above.
Notice in the final pruning photo that I have cut the side branch back to where there are older needles. The original branch was too long but new buds will grow from those needles now that I've pruned. The buds will give me new shoots that are closer so I can grow a bushier branch there now instead of a long, bare one.
Lots of needles can be good or bad. Bad because it makes it harder to see the tree. Good because wherever there are needles you can get new buds to grow if you need them. So if you have too many needles feel free to pull some off. Just make sure you leave a few in places where you may want branches in future. Probably doesn't matter on this tree because it already has plenty of branches not too far apart so you are unlikely to want more in between so you should be fine to pull them off.
You are probably correct but the pictures you've given us it is hard to see where the branches are coming from.Am i right in thinking there are 3 whorls in this tree? i almost see like 3 plates/sets of branches with the top apex of branches being the obvious biggest with the main shoot going up.
I can certainly see the top whorl fairly clearly. It has The larger central shoot, 4 medium side shoots and maybe a smaller one I think.You could leave all those on the tree as long as your intention is eventually to cut all that section off down to the whorl below - see the yatsubusa photo with my fingers. that dead section was once a trunk with a whorl of branches above.
Notice in the final pruning photo that I have cut the side branch back to where there are older needles. The original branch was too long but new buds will grow from those needles now that I've pruned. The buds will give me new shoots that are closer so I can grow a bushier branch there now instead of a long, bare one.