With the removal of my large Chinese elm - a tree that I removed in spring - my whole garden ecosystem has changed to a sunnier and hotter disposition. Good for some native bonsai - not good for my Japanese elm forests and other less sun tolerant plants.
Still ... the Chinese elm is dying hard ... throwing roots suckers at random. I’ve had good success with English elm clumps in the past ... may as well try these.
We’ll see if they survive and re-sprout in Spring.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Remnants of my Chinese Elm
- TimS
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 1951
- Joined: March 17th, 2017, 2:46 pm
- Favorite Species: Japanese Maple
- Bonsai Age: 9
- Bonsai Club: Waverly Bonsai Group
- Location: Melbourne
- Has thanked: 428 times
- Been thanked: 538 times
Re: Remnants of my Chinese Elm
If they have any roots at all I should think they will survive, absolute weed of a tree Chinese Elm!
Sorry to hear the change has been tough on the exotics but nice that the natives have picked up
Sorry to hear the change has been tough on the exotics but nice that the natives have picked up
In the blue darkening sky, the moon paints a pine tree.
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 3940
- Joined: July 6th, 2009, 8:17 am
- Favorite Species: Plum
- Bonsai Age: 0
- Bonsai Club: Goulburn Bonsai Society
- Location: Goulburn
- Has thanked: 513 times
- Been thanked: 1096 times
Re: Remnants of my Chinese Elm
Ditto to what Tim said
Check out my blog at http://www.ausbonsai.com.au/blog/Watto" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
- melbrackstone
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 3461
- Joined: December 15th, 2015, 8:05 pm
- Favorite Species: the ones that live
- Bonsai Age: 28
- Bonsai Club: Redlands, BIMER, VNBC
- Location: Brisbane
- Has thanked: 1210 times
- Been thanked: 738 times
- Contact:
Re: Remnants of my Chinese Elm
You have a lifetime supply of Chinese Elm suckers there Mark, they'll just keep popping up!
I use a temporary shade cover for summer, it's just an Amart frame with a shade cloth cover. I put it up for a couple of months, and then take it down again when the day length shortens a little. You'd probably only need some sort of cover for 6 - 8 weeks tops, but it does make a difference to both the plants and the comfort in the living area. I use bags of zeolite wired to one side of the frame to hold it down when it's windy, the other side is tied to the fence.
I use a temporary shade cover for summer, it's just an Amart frame with a shade cloth cover. I put it up for a couple of months, and then take it down again when the day length shortens a little. You'd probably only need some sort of cover for 6 - 8 weeks tops, but it does make a difference to both the plants and the comfort in the living area. I use bags of zeolite wired to one side of the frame to hold it down when it's windy, the other side is tied to the fence.