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Re: Will E. tereticornis make a viable bonsai specimen?

Posted: July 9th, 2016, 4:23 pm
by Kevin
Rory wrote:Hi again Kevin,
I checked my seedlings of Eucs this morning and I do have a tereticornis in there. So like you, I will also experiment. Though the seedling was quite pot bound, so I hope it comes good after the repot I gave it.
Rory wrote:It could also be seen as a challenge, as I am more than happy to accept his friendly glove smack, and will come back here to this thread in about 10 years time to show him my attempts - good or bad.
Hello Rory,

I am very interested in how your E. tereticornis is progressing?

Any photos would be a bonus.

Thanks,
Kevin

Re: Will E. tereticornis make a viable bonsai specimen?

Posted: July 9th, 2016, 6:55 pm
by Rory
Kevin wrote:
Rory wrote:Hi again Kevin,
I checked my seedlings of Eucs this morning and I do have a tereticornis in there. So like you, I will also experiment. Though the seedling was quite pot bound, so I hope it comes good after the repot I gave it.
Rory wrote:It could also be seen as a challenge, as I am more than happy to accept his friendly glove smack, and will come back here to this thread in about 10 years time to show him my attempts - good or bad.
Hello Rory,

I am very interested in how your E. tereticornis is progressing?

Any photos would be a bonus.

Thanks,
Kevin
Hi Kev,

Mate I am sorry, I should have stressed... they were seedlings (i think I started with 2), as in literally they were seeds about 18 months ago i think??? I'll take a look tomorrow if I can remember, but I don't think they are even worth photographing.

Re: Will E. tereticornis make a viable bonsai specimen?

Posted: July 23rd, 2016, 11:12 pm
by Rory
Kevin wrote: Hello Rory,

I am very interested in how your E. tereticornis is progressing?

Any photos would be a bonus.
Sorry mate, I remembered today :palm: (bad memory).

It is about 30cm tall and 5mm thick. There is nothing worth photographing at this stage, sorry. :shake:
But it appears very healthy so far and growing well, because in my backyard that is always a plus with so much shade to contend with. It had to survive over 8 weeks of winter with only 1 hour of sun a day, and if it was cloudy for that hour.... not good! It puts many evergreens into a slow dormancy or it kills them. For me the glass is always half full, so fortunately I no longer have to worry about the species' that don't tolerate this, because they're all dead.