Yamadori quince initial styling

Lurkinn

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I recently collected this large quince out of the landscape, root pruned hard, and tossed into an old plastic crate. No top work yet. I know I want as little symmetry in the silhouette as possible, but beyond that, I'd appreciate any input on design ideas. Thanks Bnut!
 
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Lets not put the cart in front of the horse. Give it 6-12 months to see how much survives the trauma of transplant before deciding what to do next.
Given the mass of stems I'm assuming this is Japanese quince - Chaenomeles sp. Due to the relatively thin stems and natural tendency to produce lots of suckers these are usually styled as clumps. When it recovers and is growing well I would start by cutting out most of the thinnest stems and see what is left after that. At the moment there's so much congestion nobody could see what looks good in there.
Also assume you are from Northern hemisphere somewhere because the tree has few leaves. Location has a big bearing on what should be done when so I suggest adding a location to your profile to get better advice suited to your conditions.
 
NOT Yamadori! Is field grown bush. Many, many stems looks like nightmare to untangle and have decent base left. However if surviving may be able to develop decent Bonsai in time;).
 
Ah, the pleasures of a large Japanese quince. You haven't really enjoyed life until you have a large one in landscape, and it gets a thorny invasive vine tangled up in the interior that you are trying to remove :)

Japanese quince are most commonly styled as "clump style" bonsai because of their natural growth habit. However clump style doesn't mean "chaos style". You are going to have to wade into all of those trunks and coax some design out of the madness. Along the way you will probably lose 3/4 of those trunks (or more) - but you will be left with a path forward with a handful of trunks instead of 100.

Here is an image from Nichigo Bonsai in Australia illustrating where I think you need to be headed...

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As long as I knew the plant was established in your pot (and healthy) I would start in the spring and shear the entire bush down to about 6"-8" (so that you can see the structure). Prioritize the main trunk (if any) and the largest secondary trunks. You want to end up with a mostly open front (where you can see a trunk line) and then distributed trunks on the left, right, and rear. The trunks don't have to be symmetrical, but they should be balanced visually - i.e. you can go heavier on the side with larger trunks, but make sure you give that side a little more length than the weaker side. Then WIRE ALL THE TRUNKS. Unless you have a contorted quince (you don't) you need to wire in a little character into EVERY TRUNK or they will be arrow straight and boring. And if you don't wire them all, any that you don't wire will stick out visually. Then enjoy your tree. Keep trimming away any new trunks, and wire any new growth before it hardens, and your bonsai will develop quickly. Note - as a general rule if you want blooms you will want to do your heavy pruning in the spring immediately AFTER it flowers. If you wait too long and prune in the late summer, you will likely prune away your flowers for next year. Developing ramification and balancing strength is the key to developing a good Japanese quince clump.
 
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