Sannatha/Babingtonia/BAECKEA
Posted: June 8th, 2015, 11:15 am
The many name changes on this species have not stopped me from still referring to it as a baeckea. I like that name and the tree is used to it.
I have had the baeckea for almost 10 years and thought I knew the tree well. It has never showed much inclination to back bud and where the main branches were there were never additions.
Unfortunately the tree was allowed to grow out to enable it to display flowers and it became far too large for me at a 50 cm spread and 45 cm high. I don't like large trees in my collection. The tree has a personal history and I didn't want to move it on. One branch was long with just a bit of foliage on the end so I cut it to 2 cm to jin it. I was very surprised to find that it started budding near the cut end. In late autumn the tree went into a flurry of growth, extending happily. I pruned judiciously and heavily, cutting a number of subbranches back all over the tree, leaving one or two still overly long in each location. Within weeks tiny shoots were forming closer to the trunk. I cut back more but still left sufficient foliage in every section to keep feeding the branches. Several branches that had all foliage removed died back.
Growth is slowing as winter moves in but a daily avid check shows a lot of newly developing shoots. I will wait until these are several centimetres long and then cut back to the more inward growth as well as removing the still long branchlets. The aim being to encourage budding ever closer to the trunk. I reckon it will be two years at least to get the tree back to its preferred compact state but I can accept that as long as the tree keeps throwing out new buds.
It has been removed from the bonsai pot and put in a larger training pot to enable more root growth to help push out new foliage growth. In the meantime the apex steadily refuses to do any back budding and I don't want to reduce it anymore until I have new growth coming. There is no lower branch that can be converted to the apex so it is a matter of waiting. But now that I know the tree will back bud under sufficient encouragement I am happy to wait. Although the trunk looks very straight in the photo it is not. It has movement, character and inundations that make it special.
My pruning is drastic but the tree was really out of balance and what I am doing will correct that and bring it back to show condition. It only takes time and patience.
I have had the baeckea for almost 10 years and thought I knew the tree well. It has never showed much inclination to back bud and where the main branches were there were never additions.
Unfortunately the tree was allowed to grow out to enable it to display flowers and it became far too large for me at a 50 cm spread and 45 cm high. I don't like large trees in my collection. The tree has a personal history and I didn't want to move it on. One branch was long with just a bit of foliage on the end so I cut it to 2 cm to jin it. I was very surprised to find that it started budding near the cut end. In late autumn the tree went into a flurry of growth, extending happily. I pruned judiciously and heavily, cutting a number of subbranches back all over the tree, leaving one or two still overly long in each location. Within weeks tiny shoots were forming closer to the trunk. I cut back more but still left sufficient foliage in every section to keep feeding the branches. Several branches that had all foliage removed died back.
Growth is slowing as winter moves in but a daily avid check shows a lot of newly developing shoots. I will wait until these are several centimetres long and then cut back to the more inward growth as well as removing the still long branchlets. The aim being to encourage budding ever closer to the trunk. I reckon it will be two years at least to get the tree back to its preferred compact state but I can accept that as long as the tree keeps throwing out new buds.
It has been removed from the bonsai pot and put in a larger training pot to enable more root growth to help push out new foliage growth. In the meantime the apex steadily refuses to do any back budding and I don't want to reduce it anymore until I have new growth coming. There is no lower branch that can be converted to the apex so it is a matter of waiting. But now that I know the tree will back bud under sufficient encouragement I am happy to wait. Although the trunk looks very straight in the photo it is not. It has movement, character and inundations that make it special.
My pruning is drastic but the tree was really out of balance and what I am doing will correct that and bring it back to show condition. It only takes time and patience.