Having removed so many trees of varying species, particularly very old trees, I've seen quite a few instances of structurally compromised leaders with longitudinal fractures, not actually repairing themselves, but engulfing the fractured spot over time with callous growth n sealing things up again n carrying on.
This is a fairly common trait in pines.
But from a pruning point of view becomes a head scratcher when the wounds old n well n its way to closing.
I'm giving serious consideration to just reducing these fractured but intact n green leaders very substantially, but not entirely, and letting the wounds continue closing.
I'm working an ancient Stone pine with dozens of structurally compromised leaders, and while most of em must go, there are a few big ones I want to just reduce substantially n leave in place.
Were I to cut every compromised leader out, there'd be very little left that looks like a tree.
Stone's don't sucker out at all once butchered, so yu gotta make do with what you've got.


Jemco
This is a fairly common trait in pines.
But from a pruning point of view becomes a head scratcher when the wounds old n well n its way to closing.
I'm giving serious consideration to just reducing these fractured but intact n green leaders very substantially, but not entirely, and letting the wounds continue closing.
I'm working an ancient Stone pine with dozens of structurally compromised leaders, and while most of em must go, there are a few big ones I want to just reduce substantially n leave in place.
Were I to cut every compromised leader out, there'd be very little left that looks like a tree.
Stone's don't sucker out at all once butchered, so yu gotta make do with what you've got.


Jemco











