Bonsai Noodles
Mame
So my horticultural practices tell me to never remove needles for a desired branch, or there will be dieback all the way to the trunk (mainly talking about pine/evergreen literati). But I can't help but wonder what would happen if you lose all the branches in a literati-styled tree?
Since so much of the foliage is concentrated at the top, the foliage seem to be in an awfully precarious position. Will the tree just automatically die at this point if the foliage up there is damaged? How do you mitigate risk aside from not trying to mechanically damage the tree? I guess mother-daughter style helps distribute some of that risk, but I can't help wonder for those really sparsely-foliated styled trees.
Since so much of the foliage is concentrated at the top, the foliage seem to be in an awfully precarious position. Will the tree just automatically die at this point if the foliage up there is damaged? How do you mitigate risk aside from not trying to mechanically damage the tree? I guess mother-daughter style helps distribute some of that risk, but I can't help wonder for those really sparsely-foliated styled trees.