Royal poinciana sapling from seed
- Porgie91
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leatherback wrote: It looked happy. Let's hope the repot will not be an issue.
It would have been better to let the tree grow a bit before trimming. In the end you want it to grow a trunk which you will only get by letting it grow up.
I agree it does look quite a bit sadder now! in an ideal world I would have let it grow up a lot more. I was a little worried since it was shedding all its lower branches that if I left it too long i'd end up trimming back with no leaves to offer support to supplement the regrowth. The tree was diverting all its energy to growing up, dropping all leaves lower down (which isn't unusual for this tree since every branch creates a dense canopy).
Hopefully it's okay! I've seen a lot worse recover, and I think this tree is in good shape - I'll keep the thread up to date so people can learn from my mistakes
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- Porgie91
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- leatherback
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Replied by leatherback on topic Royal poinciana sapling from seed
Posted 6 years 4 months ago #43828Porgie91 wrote: I was a little worried since it was shedding all its lower branches that if I left it too long i'd end up trimming back with no leaves to offer support to supplement the regrowth. The tree was diverting all its energy to growing up, dropping all leaves lower down (which isn't unusual for this tree since every branch creates a dense canopy).
I hope you realize that what you are referring to as branches, are in fact not branches but the leaves. Your plant does not have branches, and has not had branches yet. So what is has been dropping was lower leaves, leaving the buds. From these buds, side branches may grow.
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- Porgie91
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leatherback wrote:
Porgie91 wrote: I was a little worried since it was shedding all its lower branches that if I left it too long i'd end up trimming back with no leaves to offer support to supplement the regrowth. The tree was diverting all its energy to growing up, dropping all leaves lower down (which isn't unusual for this tree since every branch creates a dense canopy).
I hope you realize that what you are referring to as branches, are in fact not branches but the leaves. Your plant does not have branches, and has not had branches yet. So what is has been dropping was lower leaves, leaving the buds. From these buds, side branches may grow.
Thank you for the information, I did not know this! I've grown up in a cold climate, and although I spent a lot of my childhood planting tree's on the side of a mountain I don't have much technical experience with tropical species. The plant has grown back fast and now you can see some of the buds have developed a little!
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- Porgie91
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- Blackwood
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- Porgie91
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Either I'm not very experience with trimming bonsai's and I'd love any advice about where you would trim / how you'd trim. I know the standard advice would be probably to let it grow more then trim, but I'm kind of running out of space. Appreciate any feedback!
It's also worth noting the sapling is nearing 2 years old now!
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- Tropfrog
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But I would get rid of that podium and repot it into a pot that is Wide as the podium and at the same height as today. That will give you a lot more soil to grow the tree faster.
Br
Magnus
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- Porgie91
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It seems quite happy in this pot for now, but i'll buy it a new one for next spring. Species aside, this is a tropical, would you recommend cutting back before spring?
I'm at a loss to how far I can backbud it... I cut it back once before and it really didn't mind all that much, but I don't want to push my luck.
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- leatherback
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Replied by leatherback on topic Royal poinciana sapling from seed
Posted 5 years 2 months ago #53866Mine are now a little over one year old and still outside (Although in an unheated glass enclosure). They seem to be getting side-branches now.
I would not cut them now, but rather maybe next summer. But as said before.. To grow a tunk you need it to grow bigger and stronger.
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