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Pollards, are they out of vogue in the UK?


Mick Dempsey
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It can also mean training the shape, according to wiki.

Here's a twisted willow outside my workshop I do every year, given its location it's inconceivable to do anything but pollard it.

I do it in the spring rather than the usual autumn trim 'cos the regrowth looks nice all winter.

image.jpg.c55c5f86b4fabf24ebcbb2f1c7d5bc73.jpg

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It can also mean training the shape, according to wiki.

 

Here's a twisted willow outside my workshop I do every year, given its location it's inconceivable to do anything but pollard it.

 

I do it in the spring rather than the usual autumn trim 'cos the regrowth looks nice all winter.

 

 

Is that about 6foot growth a year

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Strange story about this tree, my mum bought some twisted willow "sticks" to use for flower arranging.

Once put in a vase with water and flowers some of it started to produce leaf, so she put it in the ground and grew a tree. This is a cutting from that, first planted 8 years ago.

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Strange story about this tree, my mum bought some twisted willow "sticks" to use for flower arranging.

Once put in a vase with water and flowers some of it started to produce leaf, so she put it in the ground and grew a tree. This is a cutting from that, first planted 8 years ago.

 

 

Amazing what nature can do! Trees could live thousands of years like that!

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not up on all that, heard about it with Aspen, will have a read

 

Monoculture can be anything. Its the growing of a single species within a group. Street full of planes, field full of carrots, etc.

 

Ginkgo is a monotypic genus or monotypic taxon. Only one species in existence within the tree's genera. Ginkgo biloba is the only one, there is no Ginkgo spp.

 

Aspen isn't monotypic as there are lots of poplars but it but it could be grown as a monoculture, as a woodland plantation for example.

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