What is "live vein" on a juniper trunk? I read those article about trunk work saying: first of all, identify the live veins...........anyone know how to identify and what are they actually?

No apologies Kc... I have always been fond of that nick... And am still called it often.kcpoole wrote:Happy Birthday Miss Vic ( sorry but you will always be that), and thanks for the info
I had no idea
Your ideas of flow are very correct... I don't know that I would bother with the constricting technique using wire. It would likely work, but it's unlikely to look very natural. I've never seen it done successfully. Live veining is a process that takes often hundreds of years in a natural inviornment, as stressors slowly kill off portions of the tree.... but the tree finds an equalibrium where it can support itself in that enviornment and the veins thicken and become healthy. It's best to work on a tree which is old enough to have dead wood and some veining already... then you have a better chance of success... On younger material it would be better to create dead faces... hollows... sharis... etc.... than it would to try and have the effect of live veins on young material. The reason most of the trees shown in this thead look so ancient and amazing is that they likely are.Jarrod wrote:Thanks for the information. It is kinda what i thought but you seem to have worded it better.
Happy Birthday Victrinia