New Acer.. again
- Felidae
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A. shirasawanum
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After I plunked out a handful of leaves..
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So here we are now:
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- Clicio
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But this is a very healthy acer! You will have to deal with the "Y" and define which branches to keep, and, of course, decide where to chop it (buy a bigger trashcan for the thousand leaves to be discarded).
Have fun!
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Happy to hear I’m not aloneClicio wrote: We all do do the same. Switch eggs for trees.

Thank you! Ah, I’m already in trouble to which side to keep, and wondering if I’m late for layering it (helpmeplz..). I would hate to scrap that big part.. The tree at minimum 55 cm from the root collar now, so you’re right, whatever side I keep, I must chop also.But this is a very healthy acer! You will have to deal with the "Y" and define which branches to keep, and, of course, decide where to chop it (buy a bigger trashcan for the thousand leaves to be discarded).
Have fun!
Funny tree it is.. Have someone the same, but trained cultivar?
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- leatherback
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After separating, ensure you remove the stum fully, and cover with cut paste to encourage the wound to close.
Where to layer is tricky. Hard to tell from a picture.
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Thanksleatherback wrote: nice find. I would start an air layer without hesitation if this is healthy.

Those typical “oups” moments.. :huh:I would not however, have removed any foliage
. But you will be fine, I think.
I have some theories/questions in my mind.After separating, ensure you remove the stum fully, and cover with cut paste to encourage the wound to close.
It seems okay to take the layered branch in 3-4 month, cause no more sap flow there and already have calloused over the scar, but I’m not sure what phase the tree will be in that time. Me thinkets to wait until fall (even with cut paste) with the major cuts, or those which close to the trunk to prevent too much sap escaping. Am I over worrying?
I’ll give an around(ish..) plan later.Where to layer is tricky. Hard to tell from a picture.
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- leatherback
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I personally separate as soon as roots have formed, giving the treee most time to seal the cut part (also that which goes into the ground!)
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Yep, not a puppyleatherback wrote: Dont worry about bleeding. Tree blood is not human blood which runs out.. It really is just water with some sugars.

When you are layering the tree is alreay closing down sap flow (i have concluded this, as i often see branches sprouting below layer site when rooting starts).
I personally separate as soon as roots have formed, giving the treee most time to seal the cut part (also that which goes into the ground!)
I’ll harvesting the layered part without hesitation, but my concern was, if the layer position will be much upper than the trunk (even with foliage), can I cut down the remaining stub to make flush with the tree in the same time? Of course with cut paste

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- leatherback
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As for cutting flush.. Two approaches are used: Some cut flush as soon as they separate the layer, or when they are trimming. Others leave a stub and trim that off once it has died off. Not sure which is the best as both approached have merit.
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