Rebuilding a white pine 3 year progression
- Mimo
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Posted 8 years 2 months ago #26800Auk wrote: Thanks for the drawings, but I do not think they are improvements.[/attachment]
No bother mate We all see things differently and have different tastes and aesthetic feeling. Best of luck on making it exactly as you wish it to turn out
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- Drakes
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Posted 8 years 2 months ago #26802Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Auk
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Posted 8 years 2 months ago #26803simplysaid wrote: Can the first branch be bent down enough that the dense foliage can creat more balance?
It's always tough to not see a tree in person. I'm still learning some basic branch structure so that's why I ask.
It is a good question and yes, that's the plan. The branch was wired down. I've removed the wires but the branch and new shoots will have to be wired again.
I've cut a lot of needles - I did not pull them. The remains will dry out and then can be rubbed off easily. By that time I'll re-wire.
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- simplysaid
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Posted 8 years 2 months ago #26827Auk wrote:
simplysaid wrote: Can the first branch be bent down enough that the dense foliage can creat more balance?
It's always tough to not see a tree in person. I'm still learning some basic branch structure so that's why I ask.
It is a good question and yes, that's the plan. The branch was wired down. I've removed the wires but the branch and new shoots will have to be wired again.
I've cut a lot of needles - I did not pull them. The remains will dry out and then can be rubbed off easily. By that time I'll re-wire.
I watched a video of Bjorn Bjorholm, and he said that cutting pine needles is a more accepted technique in Japan than in the USA. I wonder why?
Where did you learn to do that and how has it worked for you?
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- Drakes
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Posted 8 years 2 months ago #26905simplysaid wrote: I watched a video of Bjorn Bjorholm, and he said that cutting pine needles is a more accepted technique in Japan than in the USA. I wonder why?
Where did you learn to do that and how has it worked for you?
I think in that video Bjorn was talking about making the pads look more compact and dense by cutting longer needles, i Also remember him saying that after cutting those needles are kept moist to avoid browning. Hope i'm talking about the right video :lol:
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- Auk
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Posted 8 years 2 months ago #26911Needle pulling/plucking is something different. You can pluck needles - pulling them out in the direction of the needle, or you can cut them close to the base.
I prefer the last method (though it's a lot of work, and I do pull needles too when I get tired of cutting).
I learned this by Googling for it, examining pages, and taking the tree to the club, where someone showed it to me.
Yes, it has worked. I have more foliage now, I think that's visible on the photos.
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- Auk
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Replied by Auk on topic Rebuilding a white pine 3 year progression
Posted 7 years 7 months ago #33663The last time I cut needles and I could have wired it - but I didn't. The tree is doing well, it looks very healthy. I got more buds - so more ramification - and the pads are starting to fill out better. It is out of shape and does need wiring - but not now, that'll be somewhere end of this year.
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- Travi51
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Posted 7 years 7 months ago #33676Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Auk
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Posted 7 years 7 months ago #33679Travi51 wrote: Very nice tree. How long have you been working with it?
Thanks!
Well..this topic I created a year ago and it says "3 year progression", so that must be about 4 years
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- eangola
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Posted 7 years 6 months ago #33688Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.