Gday eliass
I think you have potted the pine to high as daiviet said the roots will die back with the heat. Also pine candles will grow up so if you wire the tips upright I think it will look better. When you next repot if you rake the roots out so they don't cross over this will improve the root spread.
“Empty your mind, be formless, shapeless - like water. Now you put water into a cup, it becomes the cup, you put water into a bottle, it becomes the bottle, you put it in a teapot, it becomes the teapot. Now water can flow or it can crash. Be like water, my friend.”
IMHO slip pot at the wrong time should only be reserved for emergency -- especially with a good looking pine like this one.
I would find a plastic pot large enough, cut out the bottom, then vertically cut through the whole remaining, so you have an opening, then wrap this around the exposed root ball. Fill it up and tied with wires or something, might be electrical tapes?
This way we can ensure the survival of the feeder roots and not place the tree at any risk.
Then for the next appropriate repot, you can apply what AndrewM has said above.
Thanks Daiviet could you explain the process further? Can I not just remove the plant from the pot and pop it untouched into a large polystyrene box and fill it to just slightly below the exposed roots?
Not sure if I agree with the branch on the bottom right of the tree. While the foliage may be going into the wind, the branch itself isn't. I would be tempted to jin it...
The Ficus Guy wrote:Not sure if I agree with the branch on the bottom right of the tree. While the foliage may be going into the wind, the branch itself isn't. I would be tempted to jin it...
I agree. It either needs to come off or Jin
Or be bent around as if it was being blown back by the wind. Also the apex need to be bent back by the wind too