SU2
Omono
I collected these two beautiful trees (one's ~1.5' tall, the other ~4' tall) while they were dormant and they bushed-out quite well, unfortunately I was having trouble w/ this bushy-ness as I was getting excellent roots/growth so figured it would be smarter to have half as many shoots, that get twice as many resources (thankfully BC's are the type of tree where the cambial flow isn't branch-specific, ie all the roots feed all the tree in contrast to other species wherein certain roots are 'tied to' certain parts of the canopy)
I began removing shoots slowly and have probably removed half of them by now, but still can't help thinking that, now that I've got good strong root-masses + such vigorous growth, that I should continue doing this, up to the point where I've just got my chosen primaries (with, perhaps, a handful of sacrifice branches intentionally left on....am glad to have removed what I've removed already, as they leave ugly marks on the beautiful trunk so want to reduce that as well as not growing-out branches that will be cut-off later if it's not for a reason, the only reason could be growing roots but the roots are strong enough at this point)
In trying to get info myself I ran across @Zach Smith 's page here where it seems he's done exactly what I'm describing, that pictured tree is 5-6mo old / collected that year and, at that time in June (his climate is very similar to mine), it looks like he's removed all the branches except for 5 that he's keeping - am I reading/interpreting that page correctly? If so then I'd think I was behind on my redundant-branch-removal process! I just wanted to chime-in here before going and removing any more than I've already done, I suspect that it's the right thing to do (so long as it's done slowly while gaging that the tree is still growing vigorously after removing any shoots) but wanted to hear you guys'&gals' thoughts!
For reference, these guys are both destined for flat-top styling, the one in the smaller oil-pan recently got slip-potted into another oil-pan to almost-double the container volume, I've secured the top leader on the small one to go upward because that'll need to grow taller / get cut-back for sure, however on the 4' tall one I think I may be able to create a great flat-top-BC just ~8-10" above the trunk height t w/o needing to grow a vertical leader / cut it back like normal on BC's, by simply training the top leaders very strongly sideways! [edited: for the tall one, am envisioning two main top-primaries just like in the pic on zach's page I linked, one of them is already branching-out really strong and getting close to where wiring/manipulation will be riskier!]
![20180602_200617.jpg 20180602_200617.jpg](https://www.bonsainut.com/data/attachments/185/185419-a49856785a63049df1117ad36a499429.jpg?hash=pJhWeFpjBJ)
One thing that confuses me a bit about the progress-pics in the link above to Zack's BC is the lack of girth on the kept-branches, if the extra branches were removed wouldn't they have fattened-up much quicker? It's hard to tell by pics of course but am pretty sure my tall BC has a top primary that's thicker than the ones on Zack's page despite mine having had so many extra branches that were taking resources - all I can come-up with is that, were they removed too quickly, the growth-spurt could've been slowed down, something I've noticed in all trees ie drastic cuttings completely slowing growth-rates which is why I've just been removing a branch at a time on my BC's, here & there, just removing the least-wanted branches and watching its response, being sure it's still vigorous (am measuring branch-length to be sure!)
I began removing shoots slowly and have probably removed half of them by now, but still can't help thinking that, now that I've got good strong root-masses + such vigorous growth, that I should continue doing this, up to the point where I've just got my chosen primaries (with, perhaps, a handful of sacrifice branches intentionally left on....am glad to have removed what I've removed already, as they leave ugly marks on the beautiful trunk so want to reduce that as well as not growing-out branches that will be cut-off later if it's not for a reason, the only reason could be growing roots but the roots are strong enough at this point)
In trying to get info myself I ran across @Zach Smith 's page here where it seems he's done exactly what I'm describing, that pictured tree is 5-6mo old / collected that year and, at that time in June (his climate is very similar to mine), it looks like he's removed all the branches except for 5 that he's keeping - am I reading/interpreting that page correctly? If so then I'd think I was behind on my redundant-branch-removal process! I just wanted to chime-in here before going and removing any more than I've already done, I suspect that it's the right thing to do (so long as it's done slowly while gaging that the tree is still growing vigorously after removing any shoots) but wanted to hear you guys'&gals' thoughts!
For reference, these guys are both destined for flat-top styling, the one in the smaller oil-pan recently got slip-potted into another oil-pan to almost-double the container volume, I've secured the top leader on the small one to go upward because that'll need to grow taller / get cut-back for sure, however on the 4' tall one I think I may be able to create a great flat-top-BC just ~8-10" above the trunk height t w/o needing to grow a vertical leader / cut it back like normal on BC's, by simply training the top leaders very strongly sideways! [edited: for the tall one, am envisioning two main top-primaries just like in the pic on zach's page I linked, one of them is already branching-out really strong and getting close to where wiring/manipulation will be riskier!]
![20180609_185752.jpg 20180609_185752.jpg](https://www.bonsainut.com/data/attachments/185/185417-1225309df494e8cd23fabbdb032b8284.jpg?hash=EiUwnfSU6M)
![20180609_185827.jpg 20180609_185827.jpg](https://www.bonsainut.com/data/attachments/185/185418-6a671ff92123241c84640a21688936eb.jpg?hash=amcf-SEjJB)
![20180602_200617.jpg 20180602_200617.jpg](https://www.bonsainut.com/data/attachments/185/185419-a49856785a63049df1117ad36a499429.jpg?hash=pJhWeFpjBJ)
One thing that confuses me a bit about the progress-pics in the link above to Zack's BC is the lack of girth on the kept-branches, if the extra branches were removed wouldn't they have fattened-up much quicker? It's hard to tell by pics of course but am pretty sure my tall BC has a top primary that's thicker than the ones on Zack's page despite mine having had so many extra branches that were taking resources - all I can come-up with is that, were they removed too quickly, the growth-spurt could've been slowed down, something I've noticed in all trees ie drastic cuttings completely slowing growth-rates which is why I've just been removing a branch at a time on my BC's, here & there, just removing the least-wanted branches and watching its response, being sure it's still vigorous (am measuring branch-length to be sure!)