Pruning Desert Trees @ArboristAdvice 

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • Our trees in the Sonoran desert tend to have an irregular growth pattern, which make them prone to codominance that can cause problems later. Pruning methods can solve this issue or make it worse. Good.

Комментарии • 7

  • @nimajnebrm
    @nimajnebrm 16 дней назад +1

    Nice instruction

  • @TomJerry-yr5vv
    @TomJerry-yr5vv 3 дня назад

    What do you do when mesquite has 2 halves. An east half and west half. The main trunk is 2 to 3 feet high (then the 2 halves start and fan out). Im afraid the tree may split in half. The tree 15 to 20 feet tall.

  • @AZnomad
    @AZnomad 16 дней назад

    Thanks Angelo

  • @rhinozen
    @rhinozen 16 дней назад

    Hey Romeo, I have a young desert willow that had some early damage resulting in a split into three trunks. I'm okay with that aesthetic long term, but should I try to force only one main trunk, pruning two of them back? Would that be healthier for the tree?

    • @ArboristAdvice
      @ArboristAdvice  16 дней назад +1

      The risk of codominant trunks is that they start to become included by pushing up against one another. I did not mention in the video that this does not hold true if the union is a “U” union and not a “V”union. When the union is tight like the letter “V” then the codoms are likely to eventually push against one another. If this is the case with your desert willow then pick the leader and subordinate what should be the lower limbs. Don’t try to do this all in one season. The larger and more mature the tree then the longer the correction will take. Even if you are never completely successful with creating absolute dominance, the scaffolding system will be stronger having simply been pruned with that goal in mind.

  • @Black-lm6db
    @Black-lm6db 16 дней назад

    Love the before & after dissolve.