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ryan_tree

Willow Leaf Ficus Progression

ryan_tree
12 years ago

Hey everyone,

I thought others would like to see the progression of a Willow Leaf Ficus that I've owned for maybe 2 years or so.

Here is the tree when first purchased, almost 2 feet tall:

{{gwi:22170}}

Ugly roots:

{{gwi:22172}}

Chopped and some root work:

{{gwi:22174}}

Roots before:

{{gwi:22176}}

Roots after:

{{gwi:22237}}

Repotted:

{{gwi:22238}}

It bud back like crazy:

{{gwi:22239}}

So I did more root work:

{{gwi:22240}}

Ended up with this:

{{gwi:22242}}

But that wasn't good enough so I chopped it back again:

{{gwi:22243}}

I let it grow:

{{gwi:22244}}

Picked a new front:

{{gwi:22245}}

And here is the tree as of today:

{{gwi:22247}}

{{gwi:22249}}

{{gwi:22251}}

Any comments?


Ryan

Comments (8)

  • tapla (mid-Michigan, USDA z5b-6a)
    12 years ago

    First - great job! You obviously understand the plant's genetic vigor and aren't at all timid about exploiting it!

    I think you have one more chop to do. I would look at the roots to determine the best planting angle, then select one of the two bar branches as the top, train it to a more vertical position, and let it grow wild for a year while restraining the other branch somewhat to allow the top to catch up so the reduction in taper isn't so radical.

    Alternate: I would wait for the tree to shoot a branch (your first branch) off the trunk opposite where the new top emerges and immediately below your chop, then remove the 2 existing branches.

    It looks like you might have chosen the front to hide the chop scar, but I wouldn't worry about that at this point. You have the makings of a nice tree that you'll have for a long time - plenty of time for the scar to heal.

  • greenman28 NorCal 7b/8a
    12 years ago

    Excellent work, Ryan!
    I'll echo Al in saying that you have a good courageous understanding of the plant.
    Most folks hesitate to make any sort of chop, and then they often get it wrong.

    Keep the updates coming! Very helpful series.


    Josh

  • ryan_tree
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Thanks Al and Josh!

    I love these Willow Leaf. I've got probably 7 or 8 of them. They grow so quickly and recover from dramatic work like you wouldn't believe.

    Al, interesting suggestion about chopping again. Might I ask why you suggested that? I think what you're suggesting is like that I've done in this picture:

    {{gwi:22253}}

    Chop at the red and wire the branch up like the green?

  • tapla (mid-Michigan, USDA z5b-6a)
    12 years ago

    Almost ..... If those branches are bar branches (last picture in your first series), and it looks like they are, the extra chop would be on a plane between just above the slightly higher branch to just above the lower branch - almost a horizontal chop. The slightly higher branch is then trained upward & the slightly lower branch becomes the tree's first branch. As it is now, the branches occur at nearly the same level.

    The reason I mentioned that is because I judged the Detroit area bonsai show last year and remember there was a F nerifolia that probably would have rec'd recognition if it wasn't for the fact that the lowest 2 branches were bar branches.

    Just a side note: I find it absolutely amazing that I can't put a face to a name worth a darn, but I remember all sorts of seemingly unimportant information about plants. I can also look a tree over briefly in the course of my travels, & then remember whose it is/was several years later when I next run across it, and even see what work (even if it was substantial) was done to it in the interim period. ;-)

    Al

  • ryan_tree
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Ah now I see it Al. Do you mean something like this?
    {{gwi:22254}}

  • tapla (mid-Michigan, USDA z5b-6a)
    12 years ago

    Yes. Now you're building a tree with the primary on the outside of a curve.

    .... almost the same as what I mentioned as the alternate suggestion in my first post, except in that case you would utilize the top you created (last photo - your OP) and wait for a branch to show itself on the opposite side below the chop. Normally I wouldn't suggest that route because you can't always depend on a branch where you need it, but with nerifolia being such a predictable and prolific back-budder, you'd be virtually assured the tree will shoot a branch where you need it - probably several.

    You'd eventually end up with a little sumo. ;-)

    Al

  • ryan_tree
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Hmmmm you've certainly given me something to think about, Al.

    Mr. Jerry Meislik and I have been discussing this same issue via e-mail and he agrees with me that the bar branches aren't too big of a deal and wouldn't cause reverse taper for many, many years.

    I'll at least look the tree over for a couple months, then see what I think in the spring.

    Thanks for giving my mind a good workout, Al!

  • korina
    11 years ago

    Ooh! Just read the thread, and I can't stand the suspense! What happened? Did it pop a branch where you wanted? Where was it? What does it look like now? Inquiring minds want to know! ;-)

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