the grasshopper wrote:i now know what the term compund leaves means than to you mojo

but im not too sure i agree with you saying that tree with those leaves are not worth your time. this bonsai i have created i really like the fact that it has compound leaves and they are still able to be controlled and used effectively. even though it prob breaks all the bonsai rules to use this gleditsia for bonsai i still like what i have created, and i have seen other people create nice trees using varieties that have compound leaves

check out this link.
viewtopic.php?f=129&t=4827
grasshopper,
I hear the argument for compound leaved trees as bonsai, but I don't think the rewards offered by said species outweigh the effort required.
Ash is the only compound leaf deciduous tree that I have ever owned or worked on and that was a long time ago. As deciduous bonsai go, in general I find that Ash are too coarse for my tastes 'hopper. The tree in the linked thread is to me OK out of leaf, but I can't help thinking there are a hundred species I would rather it be, many of which would be considered to be outside the realm of what is considered a bonsai species. No reflection at all on the grower of the tree in the thread, but it doesn't tick enough of those inexplicable visual boxes of mine for me to consider it desirable. Maybe I am a simple man who likes his deciduous trees to have finely ramified branches that reach up and out and my conifers to be stately and masculine. Perhaps I'm prejudiced, perhaps my answer to the original question asked should have been "I've never seen a decent Gleditsia bonsai, go for it, be the first" or something along those lines.
To me, there is no doubt that if in Australia we experimented with a wider variety of species than we do now, bonsai would be far more interesting to a lot more people.
But I can't help thinking: what if we just got better at growing species (native and exotic) that are ideally suited to bonsai, would that not improve the overall quality of bonsai in Australia?
Cheers,
Mojo