After I finished the backyard Saucer Magnolia last week as high as I could reach with a stepladder, I decided to tackle the front yard Saucer Magnolia. It needed it as it was more internally clutterred. Well, I spend more time in the back and I don't landscape to impress the neighbors, so the front yard always comes last.
There were downward branches, crossing branches, and upright watershoots (sideshoots that grow straight up and produce few leaves - basically parasitic growth). Took 3 hours of pruning. First, I took out all the watershoots (I have NO idea why they are called that). That part was easy because I knew I didn't want ANY of them.
Second were down-branches. They had gotten so bad, I was brushing them aside just mowing the lawn. No need for them either.
The third group (cross-branches) was trickier and I had to choose among the competing branches. I should mention that I planted the 2 Saucer Magnolias because I saw them in a small park next to where I worked once. They had awesome Spring flowers. But even more impressive was the way the City Arborists had pruned and shaped the trees into very open shapes with very twisty branches. I've been trying to replicate that for years.
To try for that look, I clear out most of the internal growth, and prune the branches to take advantage of changes in direction. The trees don't do that naturally. Rather, Saucer Mangolias seem accepting of cutting off a growing tip of a branch and encouraging a side shoot to grow at a 90 degree angle for a few feet and then doing that again after a few years of growth.
The trees I admired in the park are about a century old. Obviously, I won't live long enough to manage that look. But it is interesting to do what I can and I can hope that the person/people who move in when I am gone will have some idea about continuing that . I plan on leaving a history of the house and landscaping, updated until I am too demented to continue.
Some thoughts about trees:
1. An optimist is an elderly person who plants a sapling.
2. The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second-best time is today.
3. If I had had the money when I bought this house, I would have had the lot cleared of all trees and scraped clean. I would have magnificent specimen trees today (sourwoods, dogwoods, and golden rain trees), shading out all the invasive vines (english ivy, wild grape, poison ivy, wild blackberry, etc that I struggle with today.
4. Planting trees is the batchelor's version of fathering children.
Pictures of twisty Saucer Magnolias are hard to find. This is the best of what SEEMS to be some. The one on the front left hints at the branch angles.
And this is not a Saucer Magnolia, but shows what the idea of deliberately angled branches looks like.
And that wasn't the end of the pruning. I have 2 holly trees (they seem to grow wild in my neighborhood). But more about that next time. This is about Saucer Magnolias...
2 comments:
Good work!
Megan
Sydney, Australia
The magnolias are beautiful. That is my favorite kind of tree. We planted one in our yard when we were first married almost 28 yrs. ago and it seemed to grow more out than up. It is about 7 feet high now, but not as nice as these.
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