Japanese maples in the ground
- Ruth
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I might pick up one more of each type. I have a sunnier spot across the yard from this one. I'm curious to see at which place they progress the best.
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- Auk
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Ruth wrote: there was no way the branches were fitting through the small hole that needed to be cut for the trunk.
Branches fitting through the hole ? :huh:
Am I correct that you placed the board on top of the roots?
Is that a technique that I don't know about?
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- Ruth
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- Auk
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Ruth wrote: They put the board over the root with not much space. The idea is so it acts like a tourniquet to the trunk as it grows. This causes swelling in the tourniquet area and roots appear above the board. As the years go on you take the tree out of the ground and arrange the the new roots how you want them for a good nebari. Replant and let it grow until the trunk is the size you want. The old trunk and roots under the board are then cut off. You have your thickened trunk and hopefully a good nebari. I saw a few articles on it. Some people used a tile.
Yeah... already deleted my post

Never tried this myself. I have done tiles under the roots.
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- Ruth
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- leatherback
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- m5eaygeoff
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- leatherback
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- simplysaid
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leatherback wrote: It works well for seedlings, and is one of the standard development techniques.
So it's safe to say that this technique is mostly used for training a seedling and not an established tree?
If so... That's probably why I've never heard of this, because unless I'm going to leave a tree in my will for my son to take care of, I'd have no interest in it as a man of my age.
Don't most 名媛直播 enthusiasts try to hit the ground running for best results?
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- Ruth
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Leatherback-im excited to see if it works also. The trunk was under 1", but it may already be too old. I've seen other trunks where they used the tourniquet method on larger trunks ans it seemed to work. As long as it doesn't hurt my two little trees I'm good. It was difficult to get dirt under the board to fill in any gaps . I still don't know if I did that part well enough. If I use this technique again I have already learned things to help the process go easier in the future.
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