It's a mature plant - we've lived here for 8 years and it was mature when we
bought the house. It's huge and occupies most of our pocket handkerchief
backgarden! We've got the prunings collection on Monday, so I'd be glad of
your advice today!
Many thanks,Mike,
Perth.
Why do you want to prune it?
"Terry Collins" <terryc...@woa.com.au> wrote in message
news:42fed1cb$0$72025$c30e...@ken-reader.news.telstra.net...
In addition to these, I stand back and look at the tree and see how it is
shaped. I then prune to shape it the way I want it to look in 10 years.
You aren't supposed to remove more than 1/3 rd of the tree in one pruning.
To shape the tree, look at the branch you are wanting to prune off, and cut
it just above a bud that is pointing the direction you want the tree to
grow. Make all your cuts on a 45 degree angle, so the water will run off
rather than stand on the fresh wound.
Dwayne
"Michael Corby" <michaelc...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:42febb75$0$83956$892e...@authen.white.readfreenews.net...
If its the mulberry I'm thinking of (sorry if I'm ignorant), we've always
hacked the thing back brutally after the leaves have fallen off.
Dad has kept his tree alive for the last 40 plus years by doing this every
winter and each year the spring growth is amazing.
HTH
Amanda
>