Removing the bark
First I have to deal with the deadwood.
When you want to change the flow of
the live veins, Taxus is limited compared
with junipers. The live veins on Taxus are
not as expressive as those you can see on
junipers. Therefore I carefully examine
where the live vein or live tissue runs and
decide where I can remove it to create
deadwood.
After defining the borders of live tissue
and marking their position with chalk, I
carefully start tearing off the bark. I don't
cut clean lines into the live tissue, but
allow it tear on its own. I start from above
and, to be on the safe side, I always take
from outside the area from where the live
tissue has to remain.Removing the bark is best done in early
spring, just when the live tissue starts tobecome very active again. I can use thefissures in the bark as a guideline and soI insert my chisel, dig into the live tissueand tear off a part of the bark, letting itdefine itself. Once the borders of the newdeadwood have been marked, I can goahead and remove the rest of the bark inbetween.I am cleaning the bark and peeling off the old layers, revealing where the bark
thickens. This is an indication that there is a live vein running throughThe bark has a slight thickening here, so I mark it with chalk. This part should
remainAt the back, I use the fissures of the bark as guide to
mark the border of the deadwoodThen I carefully removing the bark in
between the marked sectionsRemoving bark at the top sectionSeen from the back, I am leaving a large section of live bark
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