Matthew Rudling
Sapling
I picked a rather old and gnarled Juniper Chinesis at a nursery which was in bad health at the time. I have left it alone these past few months but I have noticed that it is about to get inverse taper due to the Y shaped branches coming off the trunk. The inverse taper is not visible as it is happening on the front and back of tree as viewed from the sides. I am pretty new to Junipers and conifers and wanted some wisdom and advice in choosing which branch to remove. So far I am leaning to removing/jinning the right, thinner branch because the thicker one on the left shows better character and would result in better taper. I have attached some photos.



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