I've got a white pine in my front yard. Been in this house since 2002... at the time I moved in, it looked as if someone had hit it pretty hard some years before... They took enough off the main central leader than many of the uper leads began to compete for dominance which have kept the tree looking fairly compact and robust in shape, with thick deep green foliage. Kind of like a ginat christmans tree. I remember thinking that the tree looked as if it had been butchered or hit way harder than I thouht was good abck in 2002.
At the time, a buddy of mine went up in the bucket and shaped it up. I forget exactly what he did , but it was all tip work, nothing too much.
That tree has been bullet-proof ever since... A lot of the pines here are dying, they either get thinner and thinnner for a few years, or they just turn brown overnight... and they are extremely prone to ice and snow damage. That tree is so thick and full, and made it through the worst ice storm anyone around here can remember in 2014 only losing a handful of limbs when many other pines were completely trashed. I have really been amazed at how well the tree is doing and I think the heavy reduction pruing over 20 years ago, before I got here, has a lot of that has to do with it.
I keep meaning to give it another trim, but it looks so good, that it hasn't been a priority. Based on that tree and a number of Norway maples with long lanky crooked and cracked limbs that came through that same ice storm with no damage, I have developed a theory about reduction pruning.
When a early stage mature tree is tipped back with reduction cuts throughout the canopy, even lightly, that will permanently change the relative taper of the limbs, which is a fucntion of the diameter of the limb compared to its length. The added taper compared to length that it gets from this pruning will be very effective at reducing storm damage for the life of the tree..
YOU HEARD IT HERE FIRST...
and once again, it just makes sense, but no one ever thought it before...