Это видео недоступно.
Сожалеем об этом.

Pruning Deciduous Trees in Mid Fall

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 3 авг 2024
  • Thank you for your support by subscribing the channel & checking our our Momiji-en Merch!
    In this video, I am going to show you how to prune deciduous trees in mid fall. (Hackberry and japanese maples). As a deciduous tree begins to drop its leaves, it's a good time to prune the tree and remove elongated shoots & unnecessary buds in mid/late fall. This will keep the tree clean during the winter and allow the tree to focus on growing the right areas/buds in the upcoming spring. Any major cut should be done in late winter or early summer.
    -----------------------------
    ◆ Momiji-En Merch:
    bit.ly/momijienmerch
    ◆ Momiji-En Shop:
    bit.ly/momijienshop
    ◆ Instagram:
    momiji.en?...
    ◆ Website:
    momijienbonsai.com
    ◆ Facebook:
    / momijienbonsai
    ◆ THANK YOU FOR SUBSCRIBING OUR CHANNEL!
    Welcome to our channel! We are located in the beautiful Pacific Northwest (PNW)! We are in the middle of our journey to create a beautiful Japanese maple garden and develop bonsai trees for everyone to enjoy. Our garden is under construction but we hope to open it up to public in the near future! Follow us if you love Japanese maples and want to know what's happening in our garden! In this channel, we focus on walking thru our Japanese maple bonsai garden throughout all seasons, discussing how to prune Japanese maples, how to air layer Japanese maples, how to propagate Japanese maples and how to take care of them including pruning, fertilizing, etc.
    #BestViewedIn1080P60 #japanesemaple #bonsai

Комментарии • 33

  • @vagabang1978
    @vagabang1978 2 года назад

    Thailand FC สวยสุดยอดมากเลยครับ ประเมินค่าไม่ได้ มันมีคุณค่าทางจิตรใจสูงมาก

  • @mapleticker
    @mapleticker Год назад +1

    Really awesome video, great tips!! 🍁😀

  • @mapleticker
    @mapleticker Год назад +1

    Thank you so much!

  • @coltranem
    @coltranem 2 года назад +1

    Just did this type of pruning to a Chinese elm, currant, Japanese maple, and Korean hornbeam.

  • @eliodestefani7846
    @eliodestefani7846 2 года назад +1

    Thank you

    • @MomijiEn
      @MomijiEn  2 года назад

      Thank you for watching!

  • @BONSAIenCORTO
    @BONSAIenCORTO 2 года назад +1

    Nice, thanks!!

  • @bonsaibob8253
    @bonsaibob8253 2 года назад +1

    Absolutely beautiful garden. Thank You for sharing.

    • @MomijiEn
      @MomijiEn  2 года назад +1

      Thanks for watching!

  • @markcook7371
    @markcook7371 2 года назад +1

    Another Great video, Requesting informative video in the future on what you do with outdoor trees during rainy season and freezing conditions
    Thank You

    • @MomijiEn
      @MomijiEn  2 года назад

      Interesting topic...come to think of it, I don't do much to garden trees during the winter but let me think about it. Thanks!

    • @markcook7371
      @markcook7371 2 года назад

      @@MomijiEn Im sorry , what I should have said was outside Bonsai. Thank You 🙏

  • @craighunter3273
    @craighunter3273 2 года назад +1

    I like your philosophy here ie 'there is no right or wrong. It is right if you have a vision and a reason for the action'.
    Nice job with the autumn cleanup. By chance - would you have a crepe myrtle in your collection and ready for a cleanup. Cheers

    • @MomijiEn
      @MomijiEn  2 года назад +1

      Thanks! There are so many options and ways to grow bonsai trees. 😁 Unfortunately I don't have any crepe myrtle. I've been looking for one though!

  • @brucedeacon28
    @brucedeacon28 2 года назад +1

    👍🍎

  • @GarioMii
    @GarioMii 2 года назад +1

    Always love seeing your garden and relaxing videos.

  • @tomsmith2215
    @tomsmith2215 2 года назад +1

    do your shallow terracota pots freeze and crack in the winters?

    • @MomijiEn
      @MomijiEn  2 года назад

      No they usually don't where I live. (8b)

  • @tomsmith2215
    @tomsmith2215 2 года назад +1

    how many years have you worked with maples? whats your age? sorry if too personal

  • @diderkamal1
    @diderkamal1 2 года назад +2

    How cold does it get in the winter where you are? I'm London based and we're about to enter winter, and i'm wondering if i should do some branch pruning on my Katsura Maple now, or should i wait until February? I'm scared of potential branch die back in December/January

    • @MomijiEn
      @MomijiEn  2 года назад +3

      I live in Washington US. The typical temperature during the winter is usually around 35-40F (3-6C?) with occasional low temperature around 25-30F (-4 to -1C). I usually do late fall pruning within 1-2 weeks after leaves are dropping from a tree. After that, I won't prune it till late winter to be safe. I would def protect all of my small trees that I prune in late fall in an unheated greenhouse or cold frame.

    • @diderkamal1
      @diderkamal1 2 года назад +2

      @@MomijiEn Your winters are similar to ours in that case, thanks for the advice!

    • @Heritagius
      @Heritagius 2 года назад +1

      Snap - I'm London, SE (Catford).
      This isn't based on logic, more gut feel, but I tend to leave pruning deciduous until Feb / March or just before first bud break in March / April to prune. Deciduous are shutting down this time of year, not healing / growing. Plus (given the Brit climate) we get wild temperature shocks year on year - e.g. mild winter end of last year, then it flipping snowed and all the pots were ice for two weeks in late Feb and even early March this year. And to add to the fun, sometimes it's a dry winter, sometimes soaking wet.
      So (ok) sometimes we'll have a warm and reasonably dry winter from now, November, through to March / April. If so, maybe pruning now on deciduous wouldn't matter.
      But going the other way, I got smashed earlier this year. I pruned some deciduous this time in Nov 2020, hard, and then we got the "long winter" into late March / April, and it took until May or even June to sun up. Those trees took ages to wake up, it's like they had a hangover.
      So again, gut feel for us unpredictable Brits, but I'd leave it until Spring. Especially for a maple.... first HINT of green, maybe.
      Hey if you're in the South of London we should perhaps ping on separate email. Not enough Bonsai nutters around here!
      Momiji-En meanwhile - thanks for the videos, super interesting and very relaxing! And for the contact, I'd not have sent this email to another London bonsai-er but for this video. Bonsai Love sent 5,000 miles from one rainy place to another! Love what you're doing with the wider garden BTW, looks fantastic!
      Mark

    • @MomijiEn
      @MomijiEn  2 года назад

      @@Heritagius Hello back from continuously rainy Seattle :) Thank you for your comments and insights. Yes all the techniques and timing on when to do what depends on where you live, climate, and type and age of tree you are working on. There are so many variables and it's up to each of us to determine what's best for the trees based on the basic understanding of how trees grow.

  • @Chris-oq6kn
    @Chris-oq6kn 2 года назад +1

    I have a japanese maple forest and one of the trees has no buds for a long ways down the trunk , when is the very best time to prune to get back budding with a japanese maple?

    • @MomijiEn
      @MomijiEn  2 года назад

      I think the most critical thing is that the tree is healthy and fertilized properly. Then from my experience, mid fall pruning would help generate new buds for the upcoming spring & mid spring pruning after new leaves are hardened off helps to penetrate light into interior to encourage weaker shoots to grow and back bud most.

    • @Chris-oq6kn
      @Chris-oq6kn 2 года назад +1

      @@MomijiEn thank u for ur reply !. When u say mid fall is that when the leaves are still on or after they fall off? Thanks !

    • @MomijiEn
      @MomijiEn  2 года назад +1

      @@Chris-oq6kn as they are dropping leaves. At that point it's safe to prune and you don't have to worry about the tree pushing new growth at that time.

    • @Chris-oq6kn
      @Chris-oq6kn 2 года назад +1

      @@MomijiEn thank u i am going to try this out