badatusernames
Omono
I'll have to dig up an earlier photo, but this is the hornbeam I got from @JudyB last year. Original photo:
I took a class and wired it with guidance, here it was after that. There was some debate as to whether or not to keep the root on the bottom right - I'd be curious to know if folks think I did the right thing, I'm still not certain.
I thinned it out, rebuilt the apex, and wired it today. Its roots are wild - I'm going to need to deal with them this year. It was potted in an unglazed pot, and I think it needs to be in a glazed to slow down the growth. Not sure if I'm thinking of this correctly, and am open to being corrected.
A part of me regrets going as hard as I did on the apex - I could envision a different tree had I kept it all, for sure - but I feel as though it was a good opportunity to sort of take ownership of the direction of the tree while addressing how busy it was, while being confident in what I was working towards. I'd like to widen out the base of the canopy this year.
The one thing that I think I'm not going to be able to do much about is that reverse taper in the trunk. I kind of like it the way it is regardless, but a part of me wonders if there's more I could do about it given that it's an obvious flaw - perhaps air / ground layering?
Not sure if this is one of those flaws that you just need to let go and accept in a tree or if folks have other thoughts. General feedback welcome as well.
I took a class and wired it with guidance, here it was after that. There was some debate as to whether or not to keep the root on the bottom right - I'd be curious to know if folks think I did the right thing, I'm still not certain.
I thinned it out, rebuilt the apex, and wired it today. Its roots are wild - I'm going to need to deal with them this year. It was potted in an unglazed pot, and I think it needs to be in a glazed to slow down the growth. Not sure if I'm thinking of this correctly, and am open to being corrected.
A part of me regrets going as hard as I did on the apex - I could envision a different tree had I kept it all, for sure - but I feel as though it was a good opportunity to sort of take ownership of the direction of the tree while addressing how busy it was, while being confident in what I was working towards. I'd like to widen out the base of the canopy this year.
The one thing that I think I'm not going to be able to do much about is that reverse taper in the trunk. I kind of like it the way it is regardless, but a part of me wonders if there's more I could do about it given that it's an obvious flaw - perhaps air / ground layering?
Not sure if this is one of those flaws that you just need to let go and accept in a tree or if folks have other thoughts. General feedback welcome as well.