That Short Leaf is responding much like my Virginia Pines in zone 8. I was contemplating cutting the longer candles back just to see what happens. I think I will. Great video, Bjorn.
I am in indonesia Zone 13 and we have pines. I normally get 2-3 flushes per year as we don’t have winter per say. We have the rainy season. We have 2 local species being Merkusi mountain pine and Casuarina beach pine trees. I also grow JBP from seed.
An amazing material to work for at D'same time, the finished of the tree was making me excited to see. Thanks sir for your wonderful free lesson for today. God bless you and happy bonsai every one❤❤
I'm new to pines, have 2 black pines and 1, 5 needle pine, and this was helpful in that I now have an idea of how and when to start secondary candle work on my 2 black pines later this summer. I still have no clue when to start candle selection on my 5 needle pine.
This is amazing because I have a bunch of trees here in Mexico which are growing in the same way, and I was experimenting the way you're doing a few hours ago. These trees grows several times in a single year and they are difficult to keep their branches short because of the amount of annual growth. I am guilty of having some of them with excessively elongated branches, due to the fact that I let them grow freely for a full year and their branches are not as elastic as other pine species, so they cannot bend as drastically. Incredible, thank you for this video.
In Qc Canada, on Pinus sylvestris, I do late candle pruning between mid July to mid August. I leave 4 to 8 pairs of needles. I count no less than 8 weeks before first frost (October 15 where I live) to do this. When I do this, there is no pinching in spring of the same season enabling the tree to capture more energy for this purpose. Great video! Thanks for all of your quality tuts.
Bjorn thank you very much and very compliments for this very interesting video! You have a fantastic way of explaining topics thanks to your great preparation and professionalism!👏👏👏👏💯
Thanks I have seen this apically dominant material (in black pine) around and am following you here to work this into an interesting tree. Can you talk sometime about record keeping ... aside from videos ... do you keep written notes and aspirational comments for your long term episodic efforts with certain trees or just client trees or never ?
Thank you for this video I am experimenting in patagonia Chile...with native trees , and some traditional ones...very important this techniques to avoid "swelling" , how to work nevaries...and some others that just wont work in pots, or won't accept bending and so on ...lots or work , lots of frustration once in a while but lots of fun Thankyou
Thanks mate, that’s a lot of growth! Do you think it weakens the tree if you cut so much new and undeveloped growth of it in terms of hormone exchange?
Hi, love your videos by the way, amazing! A quick question if you don’t mind, I have a Japanese deshojo maple that never back buds. It’s getting very leggy so should I cut the branches back to get back bud and if so what’s the best time of year to do this. It’s currently august here in England. Thanks once again for your videos, i have just put together some maple seedlings I grew last year to make kabudachi style. Obviously inspired from your videos. An update of them would be so great to see.
Super interesting stuff man! You pushed that growth back quite a bit! Hope it flushes out again! 😀
That Short Leaf is responding much like my Virginia Pines in zone 8. I was contemplating cutting the longer candles back just to see what happens. I think I will. Great video, Bjorn.
Looks similar in growth to an Italian stone pine. They put out a juvenile foliage when hard pruned
Incredible how fast this tree is developing in such a short time. Looks like you have found an excellent native species for bonsai work!
Very interesting pine variety
nice work. im always scared to prune candles on a pine more than once a year, but sometimes u gotta do it
I love how deep and educational your videos are. Great work
I am in indonesia Zone 13 and we have pines. I normally get 2-3 flushes per year as we don’t have winter per say. We have the rainy season. We have 2 local species being Merkusi mountain pine and Casuarina beach pine trees.
I also grow JBP from seed.
pretty impressive how this tree has bounced back from decandling
Amazing flush of growth!!
An amazing material to work for at D'same time, the finished of the tree was making me excited to see. Thanks sir for your wonderful free lesson for today. God bless you and happy bonsai every one❤❤
I'm new to pines, have 2 black pines and 1, 5 needle pine, and this was helpful in that I now have an idea of how and when to start secondary candle work on my 2 black pines later this summer. I still have no clue when to start candle selection on my 5 needle pine.
This is amazing because I have a bunch of trees here in Mexico which are growing in the same way, and I was experimenting the way you're doing a few hours ago.
These trees grows several times in a single year and they are difficult to keep their branches short because of the amount of annual growth. I am guilty of having some of them with excessively elongated branches, due to the fact that I let them grow freely for a full year and their branches are not as elastic as other pine species, so they cannot bend as drastically.
Incredible, thank you for this video.
In Qc Canada, on Pinus sylvestris, I do late candle pruning between mid July to mid August. I leave 4 to 8 pairs of needles. I count no less than 8 weeks before first frost (October 15 where I live) to do this. When I do this, there is no pinching in spring of the same season enabling the tree to capture more energy for this purpose. Great video! Thanks for all of your quality tuts.
Bjorn thank you very much and very compliments for this very interesting video! You have a fantastic way of explaining topics thanks to your great preparation and professionalism!👏👏👏👏💯
Is always great to watch your videos, excellent tutorial.
My shortleaf pine bonsai is triple flush haha it’s crazy
Triple / quadruple flush hell yeah
It’s September in Wilmington, NC, and my shortleafs have new candles.
Wow qué bonito Bonsái 😮❤
Very nice
Hello Bjorn, it's a same in pinus halepensis and pinus pinea?
Thanks from Spain!
Thanks I have seen this apically dominant material (in black pine) around and am following you here to work this into an interesting tree.
Can you talk sometime about record keeping ... aside from videos ... do you keep written notes and aspirational comments for your long term episodic efforts with certain trees or just client trees or never ?
As far as natives go, West coast can have their ponderosa. I'm perfectly content with pinus echinata.
Thank you for this video
I am experimenting in patagonia Chile...with native trees , and some traditional ones...very important this techniques to avoid "swelling" , how to work nevaries...and some others that just wont work in pots, or won't accept bending and so on ...lots or work , lots of frustration once in a while but lots of fun
Thankyou
Thanks mate, that’s a lot of growth!
Do you think it weakens the tree if you cut so much new and undeveloped growth of it in terms of hormone exchange?
Hey Borjn, is this similar to Virginia pine at all? This is pretty much how mine looks and responds, here in NC.
Hi, love your videos by the way, amazing! A quick question if you don’t mind, I have a Japanese deshojo maple that never back buds. It’s getting very leggy so should I cut the branches back to get back bud and if so what’s the best time of year to do this. It’s currently august here in England. Thanks once again for your videos, i have just put together some maple seedlings I grew last year to make kabudachi style. Obviously inspired from your videos. An update of them would be so great to see.
Did it actually push a third flush?
Music is great!!! What is it?
❤
It seem like it responds to decandling better than jbp.
What is the spelling for the Latin name?
Pinus echinata
First. Very scary pruning 😅
👍👌👌🙂
looks a bit like a larch