Any suggestions please?

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There is possibly a link between years of experience and the willingness to cut back growth. I think for a lot of people it is about 20% a year until it reaches the maximum.treeman wrote:Once again...You have to cut! What is it will folks not wanting to cut??
You're probably right Rory. If you think of it logically though, it's simply a question of proportion. You consider the diameter of the trunk, and the height and you will soon come up with the conclusion that there is only so much straight line you can keep before needing some kind of movement for a particular subject. For a tree this size for example, once you reach the top of the trunk where it branches out, anything more than about say 7cm (at the most) of straight line is too much and will begin to look obvious and disagreeable to the eye. You cannot bend here so you cut of at that point. If you have a small tree of say 150mm in height, then anything more than 2cm of straight line would be too much. This is just fundamental.Rory wrote:There is possibly a link between years of experience and the willingness to cut back growth. I think for a lot of people it is about 20% a year until it reaches the maximum.treeman wrote:Once again...You have to cut! What is it will folks not wanting to cut??
For every year of practicing bonsai I got more comfortable knowing how much further I could cut back (depending on the species).
In the first year you might be hesitant and just trim by about 20%, wanting the tree to grow quicker and bigger.
Then after 3 years you may comfortably cut back to about 50%
Then after about 5 years you quite comfortably cut material back to the base.
I'm not being funny, I'm being serious.