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#1
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Pruning Magnolia Trees
My father has a large magnolia tree in his garden which is too big. It's
about 20ft tall with a generous spread and is probably magnolia soulangiana (it was already in the garden when he moved in). He would like to drastically reduce it in size - preferably halve it - it's too near the house and creates lots of shade. Does anyone know whether this is advisable or will this kill the tree or completely ruin it's looks? It currently flowers very profusely. Thanks for any advice. Liz |
#2
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On Sat, 04 Sep 2004 12:45:09 +0100, Peter Boulton
wrote: My father has a large magnolia tree in his garden which is too big. It's about 20ft tall with a generous spread and is probably magnolia soulangiana (it was already in the garden when he moved in). He would like to drastically reduce it in size - preferably halve it - it's too near the house and creates lots of shade. Does anyone know whether this is advisable or will this kill the tree or completely ruin it's looks? It currently flowers very profusely. Thanks for any advice. Liz In Treseder's book on Magnolias he implies that even quite large specimens can be pruned drastically. The best time to do it for deciduous types is after flowering. We had a M. soulangeana at our last house. Not excessively big, but occasional pruning for shape was necessary. The wood was very brittle IME, and I found that it was best to make a _significant_ cut upwards on the underside of the branch before starting the cut on the top side, otherwise the branch tends to split right down its length before it was cut right through. Cutting upwards is never easy, as the saw cut tends to close and jam the saw blade. It helps if someone can lift the branch slightly from the outer end to take some of the load. Rubbing the saw blade with candle wax can also help. Use heavy loppers on the smaller stuff. The tree always re-sprouted generously, and the shoots needed thinning out, which confirms that pruning is a perfectly viable option. Rub out unwanted new growths when they're still small, say an inch or so, or wait until they've grown long enough to be able to select the best to allow to grow on. -- Chris E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net |
#3
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Chris Hogg wrote on 04/09/2004 19:17:
On Sat, 04 Sep 2004 12:45:09 +0100, Peter Boulton wrote: My father has a large magnolia tree in his garden which is too big. It's about 20ft tall with a generous spread and is probably magnolia soulangiana (it was already in the garden when he moved in). He would like to drastically reduce it in size - preferably halve it - it's too near the house and creates lots of shade. Does anyone know whether this is advisable or will this kill the tree or completely ruin it's looks? It currently flowers very profusely. Thanks for any advice. Liz In Treseder's book on Magnolias he implies that even quite large specimens can be pruned drastically. The best time to do it for deciduous types is after flowering. We had a M. soulangeana at our last house. Not excessively big, but occasional pruning for shape was necessary. The wood was very brittle IME, and I found that it was best to make a _significant_ cut upwards on the underside of the branch before starting the cut on the top side, otherwise the branch tends to split right down its length before it was cut right through. Cutting upwards is never easy, as the saw cut tends to close and jam the saw blade. It helps if someone can lift the branch slightly from the outer end to take some of the load. Rubbing the saw blade with candle wax can also help. Use heavy loppers on the smaller stuff. The tree always re-sprouted generously, and the shoots needed thinning out, which confirms that pruning is a perfectly viable option. Rub out unwanted new growths when they're still small, say an inch or so, or wait until they've grown long enough to be able to select the best to allow to grow on. Thanks for the very helpful information - I'll be passing it on to my dad. Liz. |
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