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#1 |
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bonsaiTALK Expert
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How Does Back Budding Work?
I was told to chop down most of my Azalea so it can back bud.
I was wondering: 1) How does back budding work? (as in, why do I have to cut the tree back hard and what purpose does this do?) 2) Can I leave long branches but remove all the leaves for back budding? 3) What seasons should I do this? 4) If I just transfered my azalea into a shallow training pot, should I do this or wait? Thanks! |
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#2 |
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I stand and stare a lot
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Hi Greggles
Have a look at this wbpage and try also the other articles on that site. you may find some of these useful. Evergreen Garden Works Mike
__________________
I refuse to have a battle of wits with an unarmed person |
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#3 |
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bonsaiTALK Expert
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thanks! that's really helpful!
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#4 |
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bonsaiTALK Expert
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From what I've read, the plant now will have a whole lot of energy in the roots that will hopefully bud and allow these "stumps" to regain vigor.
I sure hope I know what I'm doing...this azalea have been grown for 8 years...sigh...all cut. |
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#5 |
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YOU CAN NOT RUSH TIME
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Greggles, a few thoughts.
When taking a picture try and have a clean plain background. Other trees in the back make it difficult to see. Lets face it, 2-D pictures are a far cry from the true 3-D reality. Having other things to look at makes it harder. Also try and put something in the picture for scale, a tree in a pot does not tell the whole picture... some use beverage cans, others use rulers, some put cell phones, either way it gives some sense of size. None of us do anything to our trees that we think will harm (read kill) them. Unfortunetly, there is little chance that we will not kill some trees in our attempt to work them. As our knowledge and ability increase we minimize the losses but they still come. Even the greatest masters have trees that die. Although it will cost you time, it is usually better to wait, sometimes it might be even as long as a year or more, to do the work on a tree. Why? Perhaps it is the incorrect time of year. Or, it could be the tree is not healthy enough to do 'this or that' to it. The tree may have been recently collected and needs time to recover. OR.... you may not know which way to go with the tree. You need to have a plan, a vision of where it is going. Best of luck Jay
__________________
A Bonsai student living with his trees at N 44.37 W 77.49... Think before you act... then think again... no good comes from rushing |
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