Hi all! Long time I didn't enter here.
Here are some updates:
Last year I did the other half HBR to remove old and compacted soil. It was a really tough task and my kids helped me =)
It really liked the new substrate. A lot of fine roots developed on the coarse and well drained soil (turface, leca and perlite)
Now it is growing strong throwing new shoots. This is how it is now:
There are a lot of straight and leggy branches I won't use on the final design and I just let them until now to keep as much foliage as possible for a fast recovery from the HBR process.
The options I am thinking are:
- More aggressive approach: Hard prune now (it is summer here where I live) and wait for a sign of recovery (new sprouts). If it recovers during this season, reduce roots on this year next spring to a smaller grow box and prepare for first styling next year autumn/winter;
- Middle aggressive: Prune some of unwanted branches, reducing not more than 1/3 or 1/2 of the foliage, and the other part in the next spring. Only reduce the roots on next year spring (Aug/Sep - 2023);
- More conservative: Wait until this year spring to prune not more than 1/2 of the foliage. Reduce the other part on next year spring (Aug/Sep - 2023) and reduce roots on 2024 autumn/winter.
I guess the middle approach would be a better approach and with relative low risk of loosing the tree. However, as this juniper seems to be very healthy, I was thinking about going aggressive, but I would like some input of you that already has done this kind of procedure.
Thanks!