badatusernames
Omono

What do you think?
Also the apex is bugging me in its silhouette, hopefully I can fix with time…
A little like this?You have two questions and I think one answers the other. Before I go on I agree with both questions.
Therefore, what if you addressed the apical issue with a slight replanting angle, tilt to the left. Then adjust the position of the plant so it is slightly left in the new pot as well. The end result might be a more dynamic view with apical flow to the left, as well as more of a multi trunk display in a landscape setting or view. A bit more expanse to one side. It may also involve slight position change of one or two interior branches near the top inside the right trunk to fine-tune the flow.
The depth of the pot is fine in my view, Place the tree a tad lower in the pot than the " virtual above"
Just another point of view.
Yes and no! Yes to the planting angle, but position to the right side so the flow goes left to the open landscape. My screw up, I wrote left when you should have read right.
You have two questions and I think one answers the other. Before I go on I agree with both questions.
Therefore, what if you addressed the apical issue with a slight replanting angle, tilt to the left. Then adjust the position of the plant so it is slightly left in the new pot as well. The end result might be a more dynamic view with apical flow to the left, as well as more of a multi trunk display in a landscape setting or view. A bit more expanse to one side. It may also involve slight position change of one or two interior branches near the top inside the right trunk to fine-tune the flow.
The depth of the pot is fine in my view, Place the tree a tad lower in the pot than the " virtual above"
Just another point of view.
It's fine. A pinch deeper than optimal, but it looks good IMO. Might be a bit better than the old one. I would NOT slip pot the tree though-have it been root pruned this year? I'd do that before transplanting it--simply putting the old unpruned root mass into a larger pot is asking for trouble down the road.
Awesome trees, Jeremy!!!Both pots are lovely.
The smart thing to do would be to loosen the roots on the sides and prune a bit on the bottom if there is a mat. Not necessary to cut lots of roots. You are just changing pots and it does not require the root work. Each time we handle trees the work should be determined by what wee find not the calendar or the normal work done.t was root pruned last year, I was thinking of loosening the roots up a bit to ensure they were integrated into the new soil well, but was erring away from cutting the roots again this year. Might not be a big deal.
I don't disagree that a round pot would work well, I just haven't found one I like for it yet. This pot feels like a good longer-term home while I find the perfect round, but to be honest, I'm kind of being won over by this rectangle too.
Interesting comment, allows the tree to speak for itself. Goes along with the pot's primary role to complement the tree.I'm not crazy about the round pot suggestion, tbh. Someone a while ago mentioned to me that rotationally symmetrical (round, square, hexagon, lotus, etc) pots work best with strongly asymmetrical trees, and it's stuck with me ever since. Even if you give it the leftward tilt, the visual mass of the second trunk is visually balanced by the right branch.
I'm probably just being too much of a stick in the mud though!
I like the planting angle. But hate the chopped shorter branch. It's thick...and stubby cut back. Sometimes living with a flaw is better than trying to fix it. I would not cut it back. That's me.Here's a rough virt. The long straight section on the left trunk/branch adds little to the composition. Get rid of it (and develop a subapex using the existing branching), tilt it to the left, and plant the whole thing to the right of the pot. Apologies for not taking more time on the virt.