I wouldn't remove it. Repot it next spring and straighten all those tangled roots up. You'll need that root to start a good spread.
If it was mine, I'd remove all those big roots, maybe successively at repotting time...I have a large surface root that I think looks unnatural, though it does balance the tree.
Would removing the circled root be safe? Good idea or bad idea?
Would it even make this tree look better, or leave it looking unbalanced?
Thanks for any suggestions,
Greg
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This is the approach I'd probably take. I'd leave it for now (raise the soil as BVF suggests), then repot next year and take a look at the current roots and what might be done with them (see if they can be moved, or if some can be removed). I do think layering might be the best long term solution, and elms do layer easily.To be honest (sorry) all those roots are a mess. If the tree was mine I'd be looking at layering it, either just above the current roots or at the first bend in the trunk where there seems to be a little bulge.
Chinese elm roots are pretty pliable at the stage yours appears to be in. Some, you may not be able to do anything with and will trim them back. The two larger ones to the right will most likely be the ones you'll just trim back. You really should cover up the roots all the way to the trunk with soil.@Vin , Aren't them so hard by now that untangling and straightening the roots will be a really difficult job? I agree, that root is needed for the nebari, but it doesn't look easy (or a one-pass project) to fix those roots.
How would you tackle this?
are pretty pliable at the stage yours appears to be in.
Ditto. Obviously you’ll need to wait for the right timing to do so but that is gonna get you the best result in the long run.I'd ground layer it.