River's Edge
Masterpiece
Age, Character, Movement, size, interior growth rejuvenating. Nice combination. My second thought is it is a good thing the collector is younger than myself.
Well done.
Well done.
Very nice!My lodgepole pine, Pinus contorta, that I collected 3 weeks ago in the Colorado Rockies. Hopefully, it will make it. I has a nice spiraling shari all along the trunkView attachment 193537View attachment 193538View attachment 193539View attachment 193537View attachment 193538View attachment 193539
Any advice on collected American Hornbeams? I’ve read they are slow to root. I’m currently experimenting and I have an air layer on a substantial tree. I’m hoping it work but the research I’ve done makes me think it’s not going to work to well.Posted elsewhere on the initial collection, but here's an American Hornbeam that's about 2 months in or so. It was a bit slower to leaf out than most of our native ones, but it's fully leafed out now and there are a number of backbuds that have popped. I know I should have trunk chopped lower on collection but I wanted to keep some of the few branches it had to ensure a strong recovery after collection. In the future the plan will be a much lower cut, but so far so good.
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I'm pretty new to all of this but I can share some of the resources I used. Check out Tony Tickle for Yamadori/collecting. There are some basics with deciduous that apply also. I collected this tree late winter/early spring. The new buds had swelled a little but were not close to unfolding yet. Collecting deciduous that time of year means that the tree should have good stored energy for recovery. Normally most people will cut them back harder than I did. I left a larger root mass in part because I really wanted to ensure having finer roots and a head start on recovery.Any advice on collected American Hornbeams? I’ve read they are slow to root. I’m currently experimenting and I have an air layer on a substantial tree. I’m hoping it work but the research I’ve done makes me think it’s not going to work to well.
Really great finds. That's so awesome.Here are a few from this weekend’s hunt...
First up is a mountain hemlock.
Second we have a lodgepole pine.
And then a subalpine fir.
I feel like I nailed this parenting thing watching the kids play in their back yard water park while I got some headway made on potting these up.
Not great pics of the trees but I will document them more thoroughly once I see some growth.
I’ve seen full grown ponderosas in New Mexico and the bark smelled like butterscotch. Do yours happen to smell like that haha?A couple Ponderosas I collected last month. Easily the quickest and most complete root balls I've collected from the mountains thus far. They were both in an area that had been recently cut down for lumber and basically fell into my bags. Glamour shots in the future if they survive. Small one is pretty out of focus.
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Yeah, butterscotch, vanilla....moreso when you're among the big ones.I’ve seen full grown ponderosas in New Mexico and the bark smelled like butterscotch. Do yours happen to smell like that haha?