SU2
Omono
I have been plagued by this with my few red/swamp maples, the idea was "After collection, let the branches run&grow until thick-enough, then cut to 2 nodes/branch, grow those out and prune them back once thick-enough; repeat til skeleton is achieved, then transition to 'shape/hedge trim' pruning techniques"
This works with almost any (broadleaf deciduous) tree I know of...but with the Maples, I can cut-back a 0.7" thick primary to its lowest single node, and it will still burst several (or a dozen) new buds on that lil remaining stump & on the collar of the stump (usually prunings will also induce trunk-budding, but at minimum all branch collars and branches go into "hyper budding" mode to a degree I simply cannot keep up with and the next thing I know I go out and find 'knuckles' (ie 3+ new vigorous branches growing from the edge of the pruned branch) with half a dozen+ wimpy backbudded shoots on the lower/collar portions of the cut branch..
I can't just let them run & grow forever lol Their "skeletons" are basically achieved, wanna go towards 'refinement' after this next/current intervention here (they are currently *bushes*, badly needing cuts to even fit into their new locations in my "rebuilt nursery", although that's not me doing this early they needed this last fall I just never got to it and it certainly can't wait til this winter as I've got 4'+ branches that are originating from primaries with nearly-90deg bends, good winds will rip them off in the upcoming stormy-season without a doubt so they need pruning, am just loathe to see the 10X backbudding that I can't keep-up with rubbing-off and don't know any tricks (can only imagine how bad it'd be if I tip-pinched, not that it's an option but imagine I'd have over a hundred backbuds if I did that...and I already prune about as aggressively as possible and even that is still an unmanageable amount of backbudding...I have done such prunes both with, and w/o, corresponding root-prunes, I should note this specie handles root-pruning better than almost anything I've seen except ficus.m's!)
Thanks for any advice working these swamp-maples!! Really stoked to start showing-off their gnarly trunks now that the 'skeletons' are about there, but not trying to make topiary/bushes here and that's what I'll get if I do my usual prune and then ignore it like I probably will!(new job/business is taking most of my time and have even lost / killed trees for the 1st time ever I mean not 'i've never lost a tree' but I mean losing bougainvilleas to underwatering, that's never happened til this year!)
This works with almost any (broadleaf deciduous) tree I know of...but with the Maples, I can cut-back a 0.7" thick primary to its lowest single node, and it will still burst several (or a dozen) new buds on that lil remaining stump & on the collar of the stump (usually prunings will also induce trunk-budding, but at minimum all branch collars and branches go into "hyper budding" mode to a degree I simply cannot keep up with and the next thing I know I go out and find 'knuckles' (ie 3+ new vigorous branches growing from the edge of the pruned branch) with half a dozen+ wimpy backbudded shoots on the lower/collar portions of the cut branch..
I can't just let them run & grow forever lol Their "skeletons" are basically achieved, wanna go towards 'refinement' after this next/current intervention here (they are currently *bushes*, badly needing cuts to even fit into their new locations in my "rebuilt nursery", although that's not me doing this early they needed this last fall I just never got to it and it certainly can't wait til this winter as I've got 4'+ branches that are originating from primaries with nearly-90deg bends, good winds will rip them off in the upcoming stormy-season without a doubt so they need pruning, am just loathe to see the 10X backbudding that I can't keep-up with rubbing-off and don't know any tricks (can only imagine how bad it'd be if I tip-pinched, not that it's an option but imagine I'd have over a hundred backbuds if I did that...and I already prune about as aggressively as possible and even that is still an unmanageable amount of backbudding...I have done such prunes both with, and w/o, corresponding root-prunes, I should note this specie handles root-pruning better than almost anything I've seen except ficus.m's!)
Thanks for any advice working these swamp-maples!! Really stoked to start showing-off their gnarly trunks now that the 'skeletons' are about there, but not trying to make topiary/bushes here and that's what I'll get if I do my usual prune and then ignore it like I probably will!(new job/business is taking most of my time and have even lost / killed trees for the 1st time ever I mean not 'i've never lost a tree' but I mean losing bougainvilleas to underwatering, that's never happened til this year!)