I am going to be harsh here, but you can yell at me laterI am going to post this as if I was the owner of this tree and I was talking to myself
I think this is an unpromising piece of material in it's current state. I think the one positive thing it has going for it is girth. The nebari is really problematic - particularly since there was a big surface root you had to chop and the best you can hope for is a huge scar on the side of the nebari.
So my advice is to start over. Let all that new growth run free. Then the moment it hardens I would airlayer right above your current surface roots. Get good roots and a nice flare at the base, and consider reducing the trunk a couple more inches in the spring - but instead of an angled cut go with a flat cut and hollow out the interior so it looks like a volcano. Then seal it with cut paste and not pruner's sealant.
If everything works well, you will get strong roots on the edge of that cut and be on your way to a killer broom style tree![]()
That's really thoughtful insight sir. Just out of curiosity, given that this is beyond hardwood, how hard is it to air layer this?So my advice is to start over. Let all that new growth run free. Then the moment it hardens I would airlayer right above your current surface roots. Get good roots and a nice flare at the base
That's really thoughtful insight sir. Just out of curiosity, given that this is beyond hardwood, how hard is it to air layer this?
No. Cedar elm sometimes develops wings on new growth. Cedar elm also has a vastly more restricted range than winged elm--but it is the most common elm species in Texas. There is an isolated population of the tree in Fla. too. Winged elm ranges over most of the southeast and into the northeast. It's common too.Does Winged Elm = Cedar Elm? Our cedar elms are winged
No. Cedar elm sometimes develops wings on new growth. Cedar elm also has a vastly more restricted range than winged elm--but it is the most common elm species in Texas. There is an isolated population of the tree in Fla. too. Winged elm ranges over most of the southeast and into the northeast. It's common too.
In cedar elm's native range, I suspect there is considerable interbreeding between the two species.
The leaves are different for both species too. Winged elm leaves tend to be larger. Cedar elm leaves can be tiny, less than a half inch long by 1/4 inch wide and oblong oval shaped...
https://npsot.org/wp/story/2011/1687/
you may be right. I've seen some variation in cedar elms in east Texas and the hill country. Could be local varieties...Actually, I don’t think that Winged elm and Cedar elm can hybridize (naturally at least). Cedar elm is a fall flowering elm. It is one of two fall flowering elms in the US - the other is the September elm, but “that boy ain’t from around here”. Winged elm is a spring flowering elm. I believe that the Chinese elm is a fall flowering elm - with the number of those that have been introduced here in Houston, it’s possible that might produce hybrids with the Cedar elm.
Scott
Our cedar elms are from Texas and their leaves are bigger than described above.