Call from the doors of Valhalla
- Felidae
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Clicio wrote: When you assure yourself they are indeed alive, you are going to chop them down, aren't you?
Sure I want to keep bonsais, not a forest in my balcony. That’ll be an other question to where, but in the antarctica, I really see something. Maybe keep two trunks, or even three if I manage to get taper.
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- Felidae
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No, not three, just two trunks. The third branch extremely coarse. On the right side layer, I’m still not sure if it’s a keeper or just chop away.
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That one looks easy on top, but a h.load of work with the rootbase. I thought to split up that big root and carving more where naturally wants to form a hole. The other side possible need root grafting also.
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If they stay alive, of course...
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- Clicio
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Felidae wrote: If they stay alive, of course...
That's the hard part...
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- Felidae
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Clicio wrote:
Felidae wrote: If they stay alive, of course...
That's the hard part...
Sure! The campestre is really in the line. I just draw that quick plan cause your first answer sounded like this for me : What the heck are you want to do with those ugly stuff?
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Just some fresh photo from it:
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- Clicio
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Careful with the external cachepot IF you intend to use it as a training pot in the future, the "neck" it has makes repoting later very tricky.
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I thought about the same and already treated with systemic fungicid once. My concern that it absorbs just close to the site and I sprayed the leaves how it’s written, but not the bark. Do you think the next treatment I need to give for the trunk also? Surplus, that already weakened tree got more mass on parasites than the weight of his own leaves. Soil just moist for touch now, but the root system was a mess with severe girdling and wet like moorlands in the nursery. The English patient..leatherback wrote: Hm.. Fungal infection? Wait a few more leaves. But I would guess some sort of infection. The soil is not horribly wet is it?
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