Fuchsia
- Rudy
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I am switching gears now from pots to trees. Does anyone have any experience or advice training / styling fuchsia bonsai?
Recently my neighbors decided to redesign their gardens / lanscape and trash a 25+ year old fuchsia bush (more the size of a samll tree). That said, I could not see it ending up in the recycle bin, so I retrieved it. After cleaning up the roots and pruning it back to the wood, I now have what I hope is the beginning of an interesting flowering bonsai.
I have read several different opinions regarding how fuchsia bonsai should be trained from pinching and cutting to wiring. The new growth is very green and soft, but still brittle, so I am a bit afraid that wiring at this stage would result in the branches breaking. What is the best approach? Wait until the branches harden off and wire it, or train the branches via directional pruning?
Thank you.
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- bob
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- m5eaygeoff
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- alainleon1983
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Rudy wrote: The new growth is very green and soft, but still brittle, so I am a bit afraid that wiring at this stage would result in the branches breaking. What is the best approach? Wait until the branches harden off and wire it, or train the branches via directional pruning?
Also, as an alternative to direct wiring you could use guy-wires. The good thing about this technique is that you can actually control the amount of pressure you place on a brach, that way you take less chances on breaking those brittle branches. Besides, this technique is less prone to cut into the bark with the only exception of the direct contact point between the branch and the wire, there you could use raffia or any other material that can effectively protect the bark.
Anyways, for more detailed information I think you could read paying special attention to the section called: "Guy-wiring 名媛直播 branches"
Alain
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- Auk
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alainleon1983 wrote: Also, as an alternative to direct wiring you could use guy-wires. The good thing about this technique is that you can actually control the amount of pressure
Not sure why you think you cannot control the pressure on a branch with normal wiring ?
you place on a brach, that way you take less chances on breaking those brittle branches.
I'd say the chance of breaking brittle branches is higher. You put force on one place only, the branch will snap off at the weakest part. Using normal wiring, when properly done, you evenly distribute the entire force over the whole branch.
What you probably were referring to is:
"When using a guy-wire, pressure can be increased slowly, giving the tree time to adept"
In other words, you do not place the branch in the position you eventually want it in rightaway - it takes months to gradually tighten the guy-wire.
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- Rudy
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- Rudy
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- Rudy
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- Rudy
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- bob
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