
the way to go and will be a beautiful tree.
What a great tree Mike! I'm a big fan of its new look and can't wait to see it once the nebari develops.treeman wrote:Only a few roots were shortened. At this stage it is vital to arrange the roots so they leave the trunk as close as possible to 45 degrees. If you leave them more or less horizontal (as they come out of the layer) you will never get thickening in the lower part of the trunk and you will never achieve a good quality nebari. (I discovered this after a few mistakes in the past).
I used some wire hoops to hold the roots in place but what ever works....
Hi delisea...delisea wrote:This begs the question, do most trees look better with shorter trunks?
Cheers,
Symon
I have to say I have a similar approach to how I first consider styling a tree as Mike does. I don't have a blanket style for all trees. What might work for a fig may not work for a lepto and so on and so on.treeman wrote:Broadening the canopy would be very easy. (and I like the ''African'' look) but I'm not really happy with the currant nebari and I don't know if this is the right species for the table top look?
It Purely depends on your personal preferencedelisea wrote:This begs the question, do most trees look better with shorter trunks?
Cheers,
Symon
Hi Steven and thanks.Steven wrote:Very, very nice Mike. Smaller tree = Big improvement!
While you are in the mood for layering...
+1 rough trunk. I even really like it with the shorter branches. Would love to see a photo of it in leaf if you have one.treeman wrote:I kind of like the rough trunk on this tree