A penny drops... so it’s like pond baskets then.
Air pruning is when the roots hit air and the tip dies. Mechanical pruning is using scissors to cut the root.Can we go all the way back to the beginning?....... What is "air pruning" and "mechanical pruning"?
Can we go all the way back to the beginning?....... What is "air pruning" and "mechanical pruning"?
That’s very interesting and falls inline with my airpruning experiences. I had a bunch of trees die because it got so hot and I wasn’t able to water them that night due to circumstances beyond my control, but the rest never grew as well as the ones in growboxes. Now that I have had a good experience with Anderson flats, I have been considering trying colanders again. The information you posted has me thinking I should be spending my efforts trying to nail down my repotting timing. Occasionally I get a tree that acts like it was never root pruned, but usually it is a little slow to grow for the first season. I would rather repot every year because the risk of drying out and killing the tree is too high in a colander.So when to use air pots or colanders? I use them for pines because those tend to grow a long time between reports an I don’t want encircling roots. I repot hardwoods and the like frequently, so no problem with encircling roots on those.
Yes, excellent threadBig roots will never get smaller. At some point you need to cut them. Read the Ebihara thread that Markyscott posted, it has everything there is to know for maples.
https://www.bonsainut.com/threads/ebihara-maples.18215/
There's also another use for pond baskets which has started more than one flame war on this site: using them open to the air for air pruning vs buried in the ground. I have used both methods without a solid conclusion. Buried in the ground, the roots escape into the soil. Then you can come in periodically with a sharp razor blade and shave them off, forcing root ramification in the pot. I doubt if there are any good scientific studies comparing the two methods, though.And before the flaming arrows come, I’m sure you’ll see folks post one or two tree anecdotes in an attempt to prove that trees actually grow faster in air pots. But in fact, when roots are constantly dying off, there’s a cost in growth rates. And the same folks who did all the air pot experiments on tens of thousands of trees demonstrated that trees grow more slowly in air pots than in regular pots.
Here’s one reference.
http://hort.ifas.ufl.edu/woody/documents/articles/EFG0901.pdf
The objective of the study was to evaluate the described shaving technique as a means of avoiding encircling roots on nursery grown plants. The primary issue that they were addressing was stability of nursery trees in the landscape - apparently trees with roots issuing radially from the trunk are more stable than trees with encircling roots. Control was provided by trees up-potted without anything having been done to the rootball - they reported that growth was not affected by shaving vs control. The results were measured by a qualitative evaluation of the rootball and the degree to which encircling roots were eliminated by the shaving, not by growth rates. There was no quantitative comparison of growth rates following the shaving technique to any other root pruning technique used by nurserymen (let alone bonsai growers). However, they did offer a very interesting but qualified (and qualitative) comparison to other studies which did look at growth rates:
"This demonstrates as others have shown (15) that container grown shade trees receiving regular irrigation can recover from severe root pruning without slowing their shoot growth."
The authors also referenced in the paper to "air pruning". Their characterization of air pruning was the following:
"Seedlings in air-pruning 5 cm (2 in) diameter containers had less packed roots, less spiraling roots, and fewer L-shaped roots (25). The authors noted that seedling grown trees in air-pruning containers produced less root defects than those grown in solid-walled containers, but they had slower root and canopy growth in the nursery due to the lateral air- pruning (25)."
So mechanical root pruning doesn’t affect top growth, but air pruning does.
S
As Markyscott noted, there is basically a tradeoff. Air pruning will produce better quality roots (generally finer roots / more feeder roots). Ground or very large container will generally produce faster growth. The faster you grow, the more likely you are to have major root problems requiring big cuts and longer recoveries. Most people ground grow because it is the fastest route to trunk thickness, but then it can take many years to build a good nebari and single layer of feeders from that.Maybe even a colander/pond basket INSIDE of a nursery container?
My thinking is the pond basket would contain the core of the roots, but you wouldn't want them to be "air pruned" as you'd need more roots for more thickening???
As Markyscott noted, there is basically a tradeoff. Air pruning will produce better quality roots (generally finer roots / more feeder roots). Ground or very large container will generally produce faster growth. The faster you grow, the more likely you are to have major root problems requiring big cuts and longer recoveries. Most people ground grow because it is the fastest route to trunk thickness, but then it can take many years to build a good nebari and single layer of feeders from that.
Personally, I think Ebihara proved that if you are an expert, you can container grow a finished tree just as fast as in-ground because the time you lose in thickening you gain in not having to retrain the roots. His technique was basically a grow box and yearly repotting to fix problems quickly.
One important note: colanders only work for air pruning if there is air on the outside. Once you put the colander in a pot or in the ground, you aren't air pruning any more. One cheater technique that does get faster growth is to set the colander ON the ground; some roots will escape, the pot is lifted periodically and the roots are cut back. This will probably produce slightly faster growth and slightly worse roots (tradeoffs!).