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Introduction
- The key to shaping a bonsai and moving any tree to a higher
state of refinement is wiring. Shaping can be done by "clip
and grow" but this is a longer term process and does not
produce the smooth fluid look of wiring.
1. Wiring is stressful to a tree
so only wire healthy trees and never one that is newly collected.
2. Wire the trunk first, then large
branches, and last the finer branches.
3. Always anchor the wire into soil,
or to the trunk, or to another branch; a loose wire never holds.
Practice wiring two branches with one wire. This saves wire and
is neater and faster. Do not wire two branches directly opposite
each other; the branches must be offset.
4. Apply the wire firmly on the branch
but not tight. Hold the last turn on the branch as you create
each new turn. Wire holds best at a 45-degree angle to the branch
length.
5. Do not wire the secondary twigs
and foliage under the wire as these will die.
6. Check by bending the wire, and
then the branch to see which is stiffer. The wire must be stiffer
if it is to hold the branch.
7. After three weeks or whenever
the wire begins to cut into the branch, remove it and apply wire
again if the branch does not hold.
8. Wire must be applied loosely on
some trees due to quick growth, wire scars, breakable branches,
new growth, etc. Do not wire really thin branches or green branches.
9. Wire the whole tree and do not
bend branches as you wire. After the whole tree has been wired
begin bending the trunk to your design concept and then bend
the lowest branches to set them. Set branches from the bottom
first. The lowest branch is the "key" branch.
10. Bend each branch once. Do not
bend back and forth repetitively as the branch may die.
11. Wire scars are never desirable.
12. Wire that will not hold the branch
in position is too fine. Apply a second wire along side the first
wire, or remove the thin wire and use a heavier gauge wire.
13. Form the branch to shape by bending
slowly. If you hear or feel cracking stop and slow down.
14. Wire applied to the outside of
the bend is the safest. Use raffia, or other bark protectors
when doing severe bends.
15. If you crack a branch but it
remains on the trunk,
stop bending immediately. Glue or cut paste the crack and wire
the branch to make it stable. Do not bend at the cracked area
for one year or more.
16. Unwiring can be dangerous. Cut
the wire off. Unwiring small wire is possible. Large sizes likely
will damage the new buds and branches.
17. Copper or aluminum wire is OK.
Copper must be annealed.
18. Crossing wires is OK but not
for exhibit.
19. Wire when wood is firm enough
to take wire.
20. Broken/fractured branch- Stop
immediately. Use cut paste on the fracture and remove wire at
the right time. Branch will be fragile for years.
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