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Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: April 16th, 2023, 12:50 pm
by Sno
I have been playing with this tree for a few years and it’s just starting to become interesting . This one was started as a cutting and was put in the ground where it didn’t do much because we were in drought . I dug it up and then the rains came . I don’t know if it would have bolted or died as where it was growing became quite swampy . Anyway it was put into a nursery flat and chopped to the lowest growth point .
As it was growing I wired some movement into it while it was flexible out to the tip . Last autumn I was going to cut it back but instead I wired down the tip into the nursery flat to ground layer it . I removed it in early spring and hopefully it will make a great mame tree one day . I did the same this year and a few weeks ago instead of wiring it back into the same pot I have wired in place a tube to grow the layer into .
This species layers really easily and it will ground layer in the bush by itself
Photos .
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Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: April 16th, 2023, 1:06 pm
by Rory
wow, that ground layer is going to be awesome. Lovely tree and lovely pot!

The parent base is awesome too. Can't wait to see these over time Sno. :beer:

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: April 16th, 2023, 4:40 pm
by shibui
I also get loads of baeckea/sannantha/whatever they are called now seedlings in my pots down here. They come from the older trees I have in pots nearby and I'm pretty confident they are spread on wind as the seeds and pots appear to have nothing of interest to birds or animals.

Very nice kunzeas. Masses of fluffy white flowers and prostrate growth habit make it even more attractive for both bonsai and garden.

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: April 16th, 2023, 7:10 pm
by Sno
Thanks Rory . It’s a nice pot ( I think Japanese origin ) but I think I can squeeze this tree into something a bit smaller . I was thinking this years layer may go into it once I train the roots a bit . The stock tree is going to be quite a gnarly shohin in a few years .

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: April 16th, 2023, 7:23 pm
by Sno
shibui wrote: April 16th, 2023, 4:40 pm I also get loads of baeckea/sannantha/whatever they are called now seedlings in my pots down here. They come from the older trees I have in pots nearby and I'm pretty confident they are spread on wind as the seeds and pots appear to have nothing of interest to birds or animals.
I wasn’t quite sure about wind because the nearest bushes are nearly 100 m’s away through bush and a lot of the seedlings are growing in clumps . The seed is quite fine so I wouldn’t have thought birds would spread them . We get strong winds so it probably is wind .
I think that ‘what ever they are called now ‘ is the most appropriate name for them that I have heard so far . :reading:

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: April 16th, 2023, 7:30 pm
by boom64
Hi Craig, great result nice movement and great gnarly base on the original. Have to be happy with that. They sure like to colonize i get hundreds popping up. Have grown a few from seed but its a long long gig. Cheers John.

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: April 16th, 2023, 8:44 pm
by BonsaiBobbie
Nice. Looking result. I live that ground layer.

Do you know if it handles shade?

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: April 16th, 2023, 9:07 pm
by Sno
boom64 wrote: April 16th, 2023, 7:30 pm Hi Craig, great result nice movement and great gnarly base on the original. Have to be happy with that. They sure like to colonize i get hundreds popping up. Have grown a few from seed but its a long long gig. Cheers John.
Thanks John . After growing this one I am thinking of mass growing it .
I saw one growing at the Jindabyne national park building which had a trunk nearly as thick as my arm ( I think they ripped it out when they renewed the gardens :palm: ) . So they will thicken over time if trained . All the rest I have seen are thin and multi branched .
Cheers Craig

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: April 16th, 2023, 9:15 pm
by Sno
BonsaiBobbie wrote: April 16th, 2023, 8:44 pm Nice. Looking result. I live that ground layer.

Do you know if it handles shade?
They grow under my gum trees (large manna gums ) so they tolerate shade . I see them a lot in local gardens in full sun . They tend to grow clumpy ,thin trunked and can get quite leggy .

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: April 17th, 2023, 12:28 pm
by BonsaiBobbie
Sno wrote: April 16th, 2023, 9:15 pm
BonsaiBobbie wrote: April 16th, 2023, 8:44 pm Nice. Looking result. I live that ground layer.

Do you know if it handles shade?
They grow under my gum trees (large manna gums ) so they tolerate shade . I see them a lot in local gardens in full sun . They tend to grow clumpy ,thin trunked and can get quite leggy .
Ta. Good to know.

Looking at my south facing balcony, the best plants so far are k. baxteri and ficus. So keen to try a few other things and try and source some more mature stock.

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: October 19th, 2023, 4:16 pm
by Hanro
First flower on mine this year @ 10mm wide

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: October 21st, 2023, 3:42 pm
by GavinG
Nice flower - where's the rest of it? (ducking for cover!)

Gavin

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: October 22nd, 2023, 7:47 am
by Hanro
Hello Gavin,

If tree was worth a photo I would have posted it with the flower.

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: October 22nd, 2023, 9:14 pm
by Rory
GavinG wrote: October 21st, 2023, 3:42 pm Nice flower - where's the rest of it? (ducking for cover!)

Gavin
:lol:

Re: Kunzea badjaensis

Posted: October 25th, 2023, 2:13 am
by GavinG
I always want to know what you have on the boil, Peter... Did you do anything particular to get the flowers - ferts, timing of pruning and so on, or did the damn thing just do whatever it felt like...

Gavin