Rory made a comment in another thread Titled: "One,Two or Three any ideas ?" (by boom64 - John): Kunzea and I wanted to comment (but I did not want to hijack the other thread so .... here's a new thread referencing Rory's comment- see an extract of Rory's comment below.
by Rory (an extract from the seperate thread):
That’s a very unique and interesting material you have there John..... .... I find as I get older and more meticulous, I’m even placing emphasis on not cutting branches flush, sometimes breaking them with my hand and allowing some peel, instead of a flush cut so it looks more natural... .... to a certain extent though..... but eucs or Cas cunninghamiana for instance look so beautiful when the bumps of broken branches are left to heal over. But they have to be broken off and not cut to give the natural look better, so that the rolling cambium heals like a bumpy wart and not a smooth crater if that makes sense.
This re-enforces what I heard at the YVBS 2018 show last weekend, with someone mentioning that hand-snapping on some natives works very well. Cool.
But here's the weird bit... and this next comment may make some label me a heretic but bear with me.
I have started hand-snapping some of my Japanese Maples!


No - only to knock the top of some trees or indeed, an unwanted old branch here and there. It is a bit like creating a jin but kinda more basic. When I get the chance I'll add a photo to illustrate.
Why am I doing this? Well firstly, I noticed that a couple of my garden planted Japanese maples snapped in the wind and sort of tore the bark away - but it looked OK over time. Further, when I was concave cutting the branches on my young Bonsai'd Japanese Maples - I'd get this kinda ugly top because the new growth would grow at harsh angles ... sure I could wire new growth but I'm exploring new ways. So I thought - what if I hand-snapped ...
I feared some kind of rot but you know what ... all seems to be going ok... we'll see.
Anyway - I thought this may be of interest. Sorry in advance if such a comment misleads people or highlights my ignorance in this fine hobby. It's not intended - rather, I am just saying that I am experimenting and it seems to be sort of working!

It this rather rough approach heresy in Japanese Maple land? Any thoughts?
Mark