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Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 4th, 2013, 6:25 pm
by Fred
Hi Folks
There is a mass of very confusing info w.r.t. pine training.
I would appreciate it if sks could give me a detailed breakdown in simple terms of what to do and when w.r.t. pine training. I am specifically talking about:
2 needle pines - Japanese Red, Japanese Black and Mugho;
3 needle pine - Pinus Radiata;
5 needle pine - Japanese White pine.
I specifically would like to know when to major prune (presumably in winter), when to cut candles and by how much and the effects these treatments will have.
I am talking about pines from initial training and not pines that only need refinement.
Fred
Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 4th, 2013, 6:28 pm
by Damian79
Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 4th, 2013, 6:31 pm
by kcpoole
Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 5th, 2013, 12:55 am
by Fred
Hi Damian and Ken
Damian - The breakdown didn't come through. Could you please repost it.
Ken - Thanks for the links.
Fred
Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 5th, 2013, 8:33 am
by Newbie.mia
Hi Fred,
The video that was posted is called Ryan Neil lecture on pines it is in 2 parts and is worth searching for on YouTube. It answered so many questions for me after I was given my first black pine. Hope you find it

Mia
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Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 5th, 2013, 9:03 am
by Scott Roxburgh
The best info I know of, and the way I have learnt to treat pines is here:
http://bonsaiboon.com/pages/shopping/sh ... etail.html
The DVDs aren't free but IMO are worth their weight in gold.
The youtube videos with Ryan are good too.
Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 5th, 2013, 9:19 am
by Newbie.mia
Thanks for the link Scott I will be checking those out for sure. My birthday is coming up I may just tell the partner he has to get me these.
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Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 5th, 2013, 10:01 am
by DavidWilloughby
Hi Fred,
If you are wanting a great book that is easy to follow on Pines, I can recommend this book:
LPB.png
It is written by an Australian for our region, it has all the info in it that you could need for Black pines and goes a long way to dispell any unfair myths that are often associated with Black pine.
If you are interested in pines, this book is a must have.
Cheers
David
Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 5th, 2013, 10:10 am
by Scott Roxburgh
I forgot about Leong's book, another great reference.

Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 5th, 2013, 10:20 am
by DavidWilloughby
Scott Roxburgh wrote:I forgot about Leong's book, another great reference.

LOL Most people do Scott so its not uncommon mate, a bit like his Fig book
An Australian writing a book for Australian conditions, quick lets ask someone from Overseas (Sorry, thats a bit cheeky)
Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 6th, 2013, 1:38 am
by Fred
Hi Folks
Thanks to one and all for your responses.
I am now making some headway in the care of pines. I like the simpler approach of Ryan and Dennis.
I know of Leong's books on Figs and Pines. Unfortunately the cost of postage to New Zealand kills the deal. When I enquired, the Fig book was $40 and the Pine book was $50. Is that still the prices?
I have a question w.r.t. more than 2 branches at a single junction. Can I remove the extra branches at this late stage, leaving the weakest two, before the sap starts rising and causing bleeding? The first 6 days of Spring have been cold and so it is still like Winter.
Fred
Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 6th, 2013, 8:52 am
by Scott Roxburgh
Yes, remove excess branches back to two.
Post a thread with pics so we can see what parts of the tree you are talking about.
Re: Pine Care Season by Season
Posted: September 9th, 2013, 12:38 pm
by Fred
Hi Scot
I have attached photos of 5 pines. These have been recently dug out of a garden. Can I now reduce down to two branches at a junction or do I have to wait until autumn / winter to eliminate the risk of bleeding?
What season is the right time to undertake major pruning?
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Fred