Rivka
Shohin
I'm getting a crack and saving a neighbors 40-60 year old Azalea.
It a large bush, which clearly will be heavily pruned, and multi-trunked, which could be good or bad, time will tell.
Looking for any specific tips and tricks as i go to dig this monster out. I have a number of large scale yamadori, its sort of my favorite things to work with, so the massive dig is not an issue for me.
but a few questions:
1- it's budding now, I'm fine with that I'm going to lose most if not all the flowers this year to the needed pruning, any reason not to cut them all off to preserve plant energy?
(i will leave 2 or 3 somewhere if I can, only to get a look at the flowers' size and color for future reference
2- I read that these back bud well, is there any common sense limits I need to keep in mind? like does it need me to leave one section alone to feed the others for the first season, or is it better to do a full chop and force it to bud out? Do I need to leave some leaves on each branch?
if I can do a full trunk chop this year, any issue with doing it now while its in the ground and held nice and stable, and then dig it out? Seems like this order of operations would be a good way to protect the roots during the shaking and movement of the hard pruning.
3- when pruning, do azalea tend to die back, if so should i to my cuts a little long and carve back the deadwood later? Or are the cuts stable for the most part and I should I cut now pretty close to where I think i will want it long term?
4- what size relative to the plant should i aim for as the initial rootball?
recommended? needed? what's overkill? i would love to save myself 3 days of digging.
any more tips, words of warning, words of encouragement? this is going to be a tiring few days for sure, wish me well!
It a large bush, which clearly will be heavily pruned, and multi-trunked, which could be good or bad, time will tell.
Looking for any specific tips and tricks as i go to dig this monster out. I have a number of large scale yamadori, its sort of my favorite things to work with, so the massive dig is not an issue for me.
but a few questions:
1- it's budding now, I'm fine with that I'm going to lose most if not all the flowers this year to the needed pruning, any reason not to cut them all off to preserve plant energy?
(i will leave 2 or 3 somewhere if I can, only to get a look at the flowers' size and color for future reference
2- I read that these back bud well, is there any common sense limits I need to keep in mind? like does it need me to leave one section alone to feed the others for the first season, or is it better to do a full chop and force it to bud out? Do I need to leave some leaves on each branch?
if I can do a full trunk chop this year, any issue with doing it now while its in the ground and held nice and stable, and then dig it out? Seems like this order of operations would be a good way to protect the roots during the shaking and movement of the hard pruning.
3- when pruning, do azalea tend to die back, if so should i to my cuts a little long and carve back the deadwood later? Or are the cuts stable for the most part and I should I cut now pretty close to where I think i will want it long term?
4- what size relative to the plant should i aim for as the initial rootball?
recommended? needed? what's overkill? i would love to save myself 3 days of digging.
any more tips, words of warning, words of encouragement? this is going to be a tiring few days for sure, wish me well!
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