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Eucalyptus niphophila sacrifice branch
Posted: April 30th, 2016, 3:34 pm
by Sno
I got this tree from my local nursery about 3 years ago . It was growing root bound in a 12 inch pot and was a couple of meteres high . I did a major root reduction and chopped it back to the nearest branch before putting it into a garden sieve . I've done this with quite a few Eucs and it works well . This year I let a branch run till today I chopped it . The branch grew to about 2.5 ms. For the amount of growth the trunk didn't really thicken to much .
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This tree has a beautiful lime green new foliage .
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The branch that was kept after the original chop died off ,future Jin
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Cheers Sno
Re: Eucalyptus niphophila sacrifice branch
Posted: May 1st, 2016, 9:44 am
by delisea
Hi Sno, is now a good time to trunk chop eucs? I have a couple of angophoras that have put good summer growth but thought I would need to put off the chop until spring.
Cheers Symon
Re: Eucalyptus niphophila sacrifice branch
Posted: May 1st, 2016, 10:16 am
by Sno
Hi delisea . I would leave trunk chopping till spring . What I chopped off was a branch . The reasons why I chopped it off now was it was becoming the main trunk and the other branches and trunk were losing vigor . Hope that makes sense .
Re: Eucalyptus niphophila sacrifice branch
Posted: May 1st, 2016, 10:30 am
by delisea
Yes that makes perfect sense. Do use wire?
Re: Eucalyptus niphophila sacrifice branch
Posted: May 2nd, 2016, 12:35 am
by GavinG
Thanks for posting. We just don't know which species thicken quickly, and which stay spindly, until someone posts their results. The blue-grey tones are quite lovely. The dead branch is looking "natural" already. Probably should be a feature of every Euc. bonsai.
Gavin
Re: Eucalyptus niphophila sacrifice branch
Posted: May 2nd, 2016, 8:08 pm
by Sno
delisea wrote:Yes that makes perfect sense. Do use wire?
Sometimes but quite loosely and not for long when they are growing .
GavinG wrote:Thanks for posting. We just don't know which species thicken quickly, and which stay spindly, until someone posts their results. The blue-grey tones are quite lovely. The dead branch is looking "natural" already. Probably should be a feature of every Euc. bonsai.
Gavin
Thanks Gavin. It was interesting to see how big I could get the branch to grow with out letting the roots escape . I will repot it in the spring and start again . The roots will be interesting to see what they have done too .