Sticks 'n' Triangles
Seedling
I recently bought this young nursery pyracantha 'teton' as I thought it had an interesting trunk line, nice tight foliage/nodes and good sacrificial branches.
![IMG20220120162030.jpg IMG20220120162030.jpg](https://www.bonsainut.com/data/attachments/406/406053-f6bcacad7be3c9c6c771aef73f475829.jpg?hash=9rysrXvjyc)
![IMG20220120162150.jpg IMG20220120162150.jpg](https://www.bonsainut.com/data/attachments/406/406054-22b3e417d99e788395ad6d15e0421fcc.jpg?hash=IrPkF9meeI)
I plan to hard prune in spring/summer, to reduce the potential inverse taper points, then allow to grow on for a few years either in a larger container or in the ground (if I can find some space
).
I read a general horticulture article for pyracantha, to prune in May (in the UK), as you can tell which branches will host the flowers and berries. I assume they say this, as most people want to keep the shrub aesthetically pleasing all year round. Or is there another reason to keep the berries on shrubs and trees? I kept most berries on the cotoneasters for the birds, but they don't seem to want to eat them anyway.
Does it make much difference to remove all/some flowers or then fruit, for the vigour of the plants one hopes to grow-on? I don't mind removing all flowers and fruit if it means a faster and healthier growing specimen. But I can imagine it depends on overall condition of the tree, species and size of fruit.
Furthermore, I also heard, that plants produce more fruit when stressed, as a sort of last chance to spread mechanism, is this true?
And lastly, does anyone know if the small, tight foliage is just a sign of youth and receiving full sun; or is it generally what this variety of pyracantha produces?
![IMG20220120162030.jpg IMG20220120162030.jpg](https://www.bonsainut.com/data/attachments/406/406053-f6bcacad7be3c9c6c771aef73f475829.jpg?hash=9rysrXvjyc)
![IMG20220120162150.jpg IMG20220120162150.jpg](https://www.bonsainut.com/data/attachments/406/406054-22b3e417d99e788395ad6d15e0421fcc.jpg?hash=IrPkF9meeI)
I plan to hard prune in spring/summer, to reduce the potential inverse taper points, then allow to grow on for a few years either in a larger container or in the ground (if I can find some space
![Er... what? o_O o_O](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f635.png)
I read a general horticulture article for pyracantha, to prune in May (in the UK), as you can tell which branches will host the flowers and berries. I assume they say this, as most people want to keep the shrub aesthetically pleasing all year round. Or is there another reason to keep the berries on shrubs and trees? I kept most berries on the cotoneasters for the birds, but they don't seem to want to eat them anyway.
Does it make much difference to remove all/some flowers or then fruit, for the vigour of the plants one hopes to grow-on? I don't mind removing all flowers and fruit if it means a faster and healthier growing specimen. But I can imagine it depends on overall condition of the tree, species and size of fruit.
Furthermore, I also heard, that plants produce more fruit when stressed, as a sort of last chance to spread mechanism, is this true?
And lastly, does anyone know if the small, tight foliage is just a sign of youth and receiving full sun; or is it generally what this variety of pyracantha produces?