Jake Hobson Niwaki Pruning

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  • Опубликовано: 4 май 2014
  • Jake Hobson talks about cloud pruning and niwaki while training a young Taxus baccata and demonstrating his favourite Japanese knot.
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Комментарии • 44

  • @jsmith3980
    @jsmith3980 6 лет назад

    Thank you Jake, very helpful.

  • @fabrizitea7271
    @fabrizitea7271 7 лет назад

    Good tutorial video. Thanks.

  • @niwakihq
    @niwakihq  10 лет назад

    yes - it's the same, Roland! Thanks

  • @miritam3932
    @miritam3932 4 года назад

    GREAT VIDEO THANK YOU FOR SHARING YOUR KNOWLEDGE... STEP BY STEP 👍👏👏👏👏👏🇬🇧

  • @niwakihq
    @niwakihq  10 лет назад

    seems very similar - thanks!

  • @Poemsapennyeach
    @Poemsapennyeach 7 лет назад

    My whole garden in Wicklow, Ireland is becoming 'other' through these sort of videos. I still keep the Wicklow look, but juxtapositioned with 'arty' pruning. It gets addictive mind you.

  • @NectarineSoup
    @NectarineSoup 7 лет назад +3

    Glad I found your channel,just came back from Japan and really want to create that Japanese look with a pine. I was wondering what the sentiment is behind the long branch being trained to extend over driveways,entrances and around the perimeter of gardens. Saw lot of this on various places.

  • @CGWS2011
    @CGWS2011 9 лет назад

    Great educative video. Love that English accent. Thanks

  • @NurayOConnell
    @NurayOConnell 8 лет назад

    Great video, thank you :)

  • @toniasfusion2797
    @toniasfusion2797 4 года назад

    Wow very nice. good job

  • @Enuff947
    @Enuff947 5 лет назад +2

    I'm onto year 5 of a seed grown black pine. In year 3 the dog chomped off the entire top and in year 4 he did it again. It's now fenced off from mr dog but looking suitably distressed.

  • @SGspecial84
    @SGspecial84 4 года назад

    Yep, that knot is a Bowline! Great technique to synch it down on any circumference

  • @Roland1949
    @Roland1949 10 лет назад +1

    The know may be the otoko musubi which seems to be a general bamboo fencing knot.

  • @bryanbatts
    @bryanbatts 10 лет назад +1

    Your knot on the trunk seemed to look like a Bowline. Great work!!! Thanks for the Video

    • @goosecouple
      @goosecouple 8 лет назад

      +bryan batts Not a Bowline because the short tail doesn't point into the big loop. Try it, you'll see that this knot is either a Reef knot or Granny's knot depending on how the tail is passed through the small loop.

  • @phonicdictation9856
    @phonicdictation9856 6 лет назад

    do you have any idea what your garden is telling you?

  • @terrencegibbons3351
    @terrencegibbons3351 Год назад

    Delightfull

  • @acechadwick
    @acechadwick 6 лет назад

    I have a small Christmas tree I rescued from a garden centre 2 years ago and planted out. I don't think it's a Norway spruce as it's branches are almost horizontal. A Nordmann fir perhaps? Anyway would these trees be suitable for cloud pruning? If perhaps i just left layers and then removed the bits in between? So it looked rather like nimbus stratus as opposed to cumulus?

    • @jakehobson904
      @jakehobson904 6 лет назад

      You could try that - thin out unwanted branches and tidy up what you keep. I’ve never tried firs is spruce, but I’ve seen it done, and it works well on bonsai I think. Go for it!!

  • @LessTalkMoreDelicious
    @LessTalkMoreDelicious 6 лет назад

    What size/millimeter rope or twine do you use for that size tree?

    • @jakehobson904
      @jakehobson904 6 лет назад

      Around 4mm I guess. As long as it’s not too thin, it’s not too important, although visually, very large diameter on smaller trees looks odd. The actual strength isn’t too important for most branches, and if it is, I double up.

  • @stijnvandongen6932
    @stijnvandongen6932 3 года назад +1

    Very instructive, thank you. How much do the bare yew branches sprout regrowth over the course over a year? I guess may be not so much if there is sufficient foliage to sustain the tree, but I'm curious what your experience is.

    • @niwakihq
      @niwakihq  3 года назад +1

      You’re right, they tend to not resprout much if there are easier options, and it’s best to cut all branches at once. I find I get 5-10cm regrow the like this.

    • @stijnvandongen6932
      @stijnvandongen6932 3 года назад +2

      @@niwakihq Super, thank you! I'm often going through the list of species in your book (Niwaki), at some point an opportunity will arise in my garden. Perhaps Acer or Camellia; we have a Quercus x hispanica that I think might be suitable, however the plan there is to just have the tree. Or a new yew. Anyway, I very much enjoy the book, even though I don't practice Niwaki yet as such, it still informs and inspires me.

    • @niwakihq
      @niwakihq  3 года назад +2

      Good luck!

  • @dibiodepaint
    @dibiodepaint 5 лет назад

    sungguh indah

  • @TeslaDanser
    @TeslaDanser 2 года назад

    What was that 1st okatsune used on the 1st taxus? Looked like a secateurs/shears hybrid

    • @niwakihq
      @niwakihq  2 года назад +1

      They were Tobisho Barracuda Clippers - yes, a hybrid. Really good for heavy clipping. Niwaki also have the GR Pro Barracuda, similar spec. Both very good all rounders.

    • @TeslaDanser
      @TeslaDanser 2 года назад

      @@niwakihq thanks for the reply JH. I will certainly be having browse. The trouble is deciding and trying not to run a massive cart!

  • @noga8974
    @noga8974 Год назад

    Hi Jake, is there a recommended time of year for pruning and training Scots Pines in the northern hemisphere?

    • @niwakihq
      @niwakihq  Год назад

      autumn is usually the best, once growth has stopped, with early summer for bud pruning.

    • @noga8974
      @noga8974 Год назад

      @@niwakihq excellent thanks

  • @Tom-fz6pe
    @Tom-fz6pe 5 лет назад

    How would this method work for fruit-bearing trees?

    • @niwakihq
      @niwakihq  5 лет назад

      yes - I think it's very similar to how and why fruit trees are trained, just with a different aesthetic. Jim Buckland at West Dean trained the apples there a similar way.

  • @tinglow6594
    @tinglow6594 4 года назад

    Hi, would this work with ceanothus?

    • @niwakihq
      @niwakihq  4 года назад +1

      Yes it would, but you have to be careful not to over prune it- I’ve found it doesn’t like being cut too hard

    • @tinglow6594
      @tinglow6594 4 года назад

      @@niwakihq Thanks very much!

  • @Josef_R
    @Josef_R 3 года назад

    Sadly, this video was the closest thing I could find to starting a year old tree in the ground.

  • @SGspecial84
    @SGspecial84 4 года назад

    Why spend years on a Yew :( Can't stand these trees. Pines and junipers are much more beautiful.

  • @NectarineSoup
    @NectarineSoup 7 лет назад

    Glad I found your channel,just came back from Japan and really want to create that Japanese look with a pine. I was wondering what the sentiment is behind the long branch being trained to extend over driveways,entrances and around the perimeter of gardens. Saw lot of this on various places.

    • @boonesergio2600
      @boonesergio2600 3 года назад

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    • @nelsonlance1256
      @nelsonlance1256 3 года назад

      @Boone Sergio Flixportal :P

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      @nelsonlance1256 3 года назад

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