Leptospermum petersonii - Lemon Scented Tea Tree
Posted: October 26th, 2021, 8:29 am
After seeing Rycemans update on his natural competition tree I responded with some of my experience of growing them. To keep his thread from cluttering up as its a competition thread I thought I would post it separately here.
I have 3 trees that I have been growing out with the occasional hard cut back. I never cut back beyond green as some Leptos will not report if you do, unless I'm removing a branch. Sometimes I will get shoots from the end of the cut branch, other times, like Ryceman found, I will get a shoot from the base of the cut branch. I have also seen these trunk chopped in a nursery and they happily resprouted. But I tend to keep it on the safe side. There will often be back budding behind the green leaves.
New shoots tend to be very vigorous.
They love water and are often the first to go limp when thirsty. I now grow them in water which can produce lanky growth.
They will thicken in a pot quite nicely, albeit slowly. Best results are when left to run between chops.
They will get ropey trunks as vascular tissues thicken to feed vigorous branches.
Bark is lovely and flakey.
I have only done a little wiring as they tend to produce interesting shapes themselves. They are quite flexible but tend to spring back quite easily so would need thick aluminium wires on woody branches. I haven't tried copper yet but one of my trees I want to do some wiring on so will see if that holds better. One of the trees I put aluminium wire on didn't give me much control, but I wasn't looking to manipulate it too much, rather just spread it out a bit. (It will be in the pictures below)
They produce a lot of fibrous roots quite easily so repotting is straight forward and they don't seem to mind a lot of root reduction. Like all my natives I wait until warmer weather settles in. Where I live that would be anytime from late September. I could probably also repot in autumn as we have pretty mild winters.
And with that, now to the pics.
No 1. Ive left the top uncut as I want to thicken the trunk a little more
No 2. Ive left the low branch to help thicken the base
No 3 was done a few days ago so no before shot. You can see the aluminium wire I used just to spread the branches a little.
I have 3 trees that I have been growing out with the occasional hard cut back. I never cut back beyond green as some Leptos will not report if you do, unless I'm removing a branch. Sometimes I will get shoots from the end of the cut branch, other times, like Ryceman found, I will get a shoot from the base of the cut branch. I have also seen these trunk chopped in a nursery and they happily resprouted. But I tend to keep it on the safe side. There will often be back budding behind the green leaves.
New shoots tend to be very vigorous.
They love water and are often the first to go limp when thirsty. I now grow them in water which can produce lanky growth.
They will thicken in a pot quite nicely, albeit slowly. Best results are when left to run between chops.
They will get ropey trunks as vascular tissues thicken to feed vigorous branches.
Bark is lovely and flakey.
I have only done a little wiring as they tend to produce interesting shapes themselves. They are quite flexible but tend to spring back quite easily so would need thick aluminium wires on woody branches. I haven't tried copper yet but one of my trees I want to do some wiring on so will see if that holds better. One of the trees I put aluminium wire on didn't give me much control, but I wasn't looking to manipulate it too much, rather just spread it out a bit. (It will be in the pictures below)
They produce a lot of fibrous roots quite easily so repotting is straight forward and they don't seem to mind a lot of root reduction. Like all my natives I wait until warmer weather settles in. Where I live that would be anytime from late September. I could probably also repot in autumn as we have pretty mild winters.
And with that, now to the pics.
No 1. Ive left the top uncut as I want to thicken the trunk a little more
No 2. Ive left the low branch to help thicken the base
No 3 was done a few days ago so no before shot. You can see the aluminium wire I used just to spread the branches a little.