Growing Black Pines For Bonsai PDF
Growing Black Pines For Bonsai PDF
Growing Black Pines For Bonsai PDF
by Brent Walston
Introduction
I have now classified the techniques into three basic categories. These
are based on the physiology of the plant's growth response to pruning.
Understanding the response to pruning gives you the tools to design and
train your tree.
This is the pruning technique that John Naka suggests and the one I have
mostly relied upon to shape my trees. It is slow but gives the most refined
growth. Removing a candle at its base will stimulate the dormant buds in
that node (whorl) primarily. These buds will produce shorter secondary
candles, the length depending mostly on the timing of the pruning. Prune
early and they will be long, prune late and they will be short.
You can manipulate this principle to get just the right size candles for the
next branch extension. Timing can vary even within the same tree. Prune
the candles of the lower, weaker branches early for longer secondary
candles, prune the upper, stronger candles later to slow down the growth
of its secondary candles. In this fashion you can balance the growth of
the tree and make the new growth even or shorter in the top of the tree
for a finer apex.
Pruning candles back to the node will always produce mature, typical
wood. That is what I like about this technique. You can rely upon the
response to produce fairly short needles with strong nodal response, that
is, there will a strong node at the base of the candle and at its tip (the
following season). This is in contrast to juvenile growth discussed below.
This kind of pruning can be used when you have branch or branch
section in just the right spot, but the internodal distance is too great. To
save and use the branch you have to make a bud break somewhere in the
middle so you can prune it back. The object in training any of the
branches of a black pine is to produce a series of forked branches with
the length of each fork DIMINISHING as they proceed toward the end of
the branch. This is usually accomplished by timing the secondary
candles as explained above. However, sometimes you blow it, or you
acquire a pine with branches in the right position, but with internodes are
too long, particularly the first internode.
If there are still needles on the section you want to stimulate, simply cut
the branch off just before the node (whorl) at the end of this section. I
usually do this in late winter, but I don't think the timing is all that
important. This is another fuzzy area for me, and I will probably know the
answer in another five years. I did learn one new trick though. A
colleague of mine prunes in late winter as I do, but doesn't prune the
needles until later, usually in July. Removing the tips of the needles
further reduces the auxin flow and will help in releasing the adventitious
buds. It certainly works for him, he creates branch stubs with little fuzz
balls at the end of them after one year. So cut the needles in half on the
remaining branch stub in summer. New buds will be evident by fall.
If the section you want to stimulate doesn't not have needles (older
wood) you cannot use the above procedure. Conifers are very sensitive
to the hormone feedback system between the roots and the branches. I
think this partly due to the long lag time (much longer than deciduous
plants) for bud break. Strongly growing branches send the hormone
auxin to the roots (actually specific roots) which stimulates those roots to
increase their growth to support the new foliage. Roots thus stimulated
send more of the hormone cytokinin to the branch to stimulate stronger
branch and foliage growth. If the roots fail to receive the auxin signal
which is produced by the terminal buds and foliage, they will cut off the
cytokinins and eventually wall off the area causing the branch to die.
And finally
There are also some general growth issues for training black pine and
design considerations that must be tailored to these pruning techniques.
These are addressed in the companion article to this piece: Training
Black Pine for Bonsai