corylus avellana literati or not literati..
- Josh
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 1518
- Joined: January 9th, 2012, 9:28 pm
- Favorite Species: pines
- Bonsai Age: 4
- Bonsai Club: Mt Waverly
- Location: Mornington Peninsular, VIc
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 16 times
- Contact:
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
Hi Bodhi,
I just picked up one of these trees yesterday (inspired by yours). It's a lot smaller than yours, they had big ones too, bases about 15-20 cm, about 1 mtr high with 5-6 trunks from the base. They looked amazing. I would have bought the big but the minister for finance said no so had to settle for a small one.
Interested in any info you can provide such as:
How hard can you root prune?
Do they back bud easy?
Do they back bud on old wood?
Can you take cuttings?
Any help would be great. I really love this tree and it's natural twisted shape. Thinking I may go back and get some more to pop in the ground for a while to grow on.
Thanks
Josh
I just picked up one of these trees yesterday (inspired by yours). It's a lot smaller than yours, they had big ones too, bases about 15-20 cm, about 1 mtr high with 5-6 trunks from the base. They looked amazing. I would have bought the big but the minister for finance said no so had to settle for a small one.
Interested in any info you can provide such as:
How hard can you root prune?
Do they back bud easy?
Do they back bud on old wood?
Can you take cuttings?
Any help would be great. I really love this tree and it's natural twisted shape. Thinking I may go back and get some more to pop in the ground for a while to grow on.
Thanks
Josh
- bodhidharma
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 5007
- Joined: August 13th, 2009, 1:14 pm
- Favorite Species: English Elm
- Bonsai Age: 24
- Bonsai Club: goldfields
- Location: Daylesford, Victoria....Central Highlands
- Been thanked: 11 times
- Contact:
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
Hi Josh,Josh wrote:Interested in any info you can provide such as:
How hard can you root prune?
Do they back bud easy?
Do they back bud on old wood?
Can you take cuttings?
back budding is no problem on young healthy ones and will back bud on old wood. This one refuses to but a younger one i had did all the right things. It will sucker like mad and you should leave them on to thicken the trunk. I have never tried cuttings but give it a go. I always root prune this while it is dormant (late July) and go very gently as this is an old tree. You can go quite hard on younger ones.
"Advice is rarely welcome, and the one's who need it the most welcome it the least"
- Josh
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 1518
- Joined: January 9th, 2012, 9:28 pm
- Favorite Species: pines
- Bonsai Age: 4
- Bonsai Club: Mt Waverly
- Location: Mornington Peninsular, VIc
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 16 times
- Contact:
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
Thanks Bodhi,bodhidharma wrote:Hi Josh,Josh wrote:Interested in any info you can provide such as:
How hard can you root prune?
Do they back bud easy?
Do they back bud on old wood?
Can you take cuttings?
back budding is no problem on young healthy ones and will back bud on old wood. This one refuses to but a younger one i had did all the right things. It will sucker like mad and you should leave them on to thicken the trunk. I have never tried cuttings but give it a go. I always root prune this while it is dormant (late July) and go very gently as this is an old tree. You can go quite hard on younger ones.
They had some there that were around 12 plus yrs old. Muti trunks 5-6 trunks and a fat base. Would have looked great in a bonsai pot. Thanks for the info, I might chuck mine in the ground for a year or 2 to fatten.
How well do old scares heal over on these??
Thanks
Josh
- bodhidharma
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 5007
- Joined: August 13th, 2009, 1:14 pm
- Favorite Species: English Elm
- Bonsai Age: 24
- Bonsai Club: goldfields
- Location: Daylesford, Victoria....Central Highlands
- Been thanked: 11 times
- Contact:
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
Thanks Bodhi,
They had some there that were around 12 plus yrs old. Muti trunks 5-6 trunks and a fat base. Would have looked great in a bonsai pot. Thanks for the info, I might chuck mine in the ground for a year or 2 to fatten.
How well do old scares heal over on these??
Thanks
Josh[/quote]
I thought it was time to answer this for you Josh
The tree has done amazing things and it was pleasing to see the leaf size reduce markedly. I have carved the trunk now and enhanced its age as it was completely hollow anyway, i just enhanced the look. Scarring on this one heals sloooowly but young trees heal quickly. I forgot how tall this tree is (850mm) and cannot fit it into the framing.
They had some there that were around 12 plus yrs old. Muti trunks 5-6 trunks and a fat base. Would have looked great in a bonsai pot. Thanks for the info, I might chuck mine in the ground for a year or 2 to fatten.
How well do old scares heal over on these??
Thanks
Josh[/quote]
I thought it was time to answer this for you Josh

The tree has done amazing things and it was pleasing to see the leaf size reduce markedly. I have carved the trunk now and enhanced its age as it was completely hollow anyway, i just enhanced the look. Scarring on this one heals sloooowly but young trees heal quickly. I forgot how tall this tree is (850mm) and cannot fit it into the framing.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
Last edited by bodhidharma on November 24th, 2015, 8:25 am, edited 1 time in total.
"Advice is rarely welcome, and the one's who need it the most welcome it the least"
- Rory
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 2916
- Joined: January 23rd, 2013, 11:19 pm
- Favorite Species: Baeckea Phebalium Casuarina & Banksia
- Bonsai Age: 27
- Location: Central Coast, NSW
- Has thanked: 25 times
- Been thanked: 561 times
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
This is the first time I've stumbled across this thread. Beautiful piece of stock you have going there Bodhi. Very nice!
I like it a lot.
I have no thoughts either way on the literati discussion, but I really like what you are doing with it.

I have no thoughts either way on the literati discussion, but I really like what you are doing with it.

Rory
I style Bonsai naturally, just as they would appear in the wild.
Central Coast, NSW
Bonsai: Casuarina Leptospermum Banksia Phebalium Baeckea Melalueca Ficus
Growing Australian natives as Bonsai: viewtopic.php?p=289480#p289480
Buying and repotting Native nursery material: viewtopic.php?f=78&t=30724
Growing tips for Casuarina as Bonsai: viewtopic.php?p=244995#p244995
How to reduce moss from the trunk without damaging the bark: viewtopic.php?p=295227#p295227
I style Bonsai naturally, just as they would appear in the wild.
Central Coast, NSW
Bonsai: Casuarina Leptospermum Banksia Phebalium Baeckea Melalueca Ficus
Growing Australian natives as Bonsai: viewtopic.php?p=289480#p289480
Buying and repotting Native nursery material: viewtopic.php?f=78&t=30724
Growing tips for Casuarina as Bonsai: viewtopic.php?p=244995#p244995
How to reduce moss from the trunk without damaging the bark: viewtopic.php?p=295227#p295227
- Josh
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 1518
- Joined: January 9th, 2012, 9:28 pm
- Favorite Species: pines
- Bonsai Age: 4
- Bonsai Club: Mt Waverly
- Location: Mornington Peninsular, VIc
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 16 times
- Contact:
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
Better late than never as they saybodhidharma wrote:
I thought it was time to answer this for you Josh![]()
The tree has done amazing things and it was pleasing to see the leaf size reduce markedly. I have carved the trunk now and enhanced its age as it was completely hollow anyway, i just enhanced the look. Scarring on this one heals sloooowly but young trees heal quickly. I forgot how tall this tree is (850mm) and cannot fit it into the framing.

Looking good, please keep us updated.
Josh
- bodhidharma
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 5007
- Joined: August 13th, 2009, 1:14 pm
- Favorite Species: English Elm
- Bonsai Age: 24
- Bonsai Club: goldfields
- Location: Daylesford, Victoria....Central Highlands
- Been thanked: 11 times
- Contact:
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
Hi Josh, no you cannot defoliate corylus as they won't leaf out again.It has been my experience that when you defoliate, the bud underneath does not mature and leaf out. The tree goes into a kind of dormancy (which does not seem to hurt them) and the bud just sits there, which does not look to bad. Minimum feeding and skipping a repot for a couple of years has done it. Remember though, mine is an old tree and would be a lot slower than younger tree's.Josh wrote: I assume leaf reduction was from defoliation. When do you do this and do you do total or partial defoliation.
Looking good, please keep us updated.
"Advice is rarely welcome, and the one's who need it the most welcome it the least"
- Ray M
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 1403
- Joined: November 5th, 2009, 3:36 pm
- Favorite Species: Figs, Junipers, Maples, Elms, Pines, Banksias
- Bonsai Age: 31
- Bonsai Club: The School of Bonsai
- Location: Winston Hills NSW
- Been thanked: 16 times
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
Hi Bodhi,bodhidharma wrote:Hi Josh, no you cannot defoliate corylus as they won't leaf out again.It has been my experience that when you defoliate, the bud underneath does not mature and leaf out. The tree goes into a kind of dormancy (which does not seem to hurt them) and the bud just sits there, which does not look to bad. Minimum feeding and skipping a repot for a couple of years has done it. Remember though, mine is an old tree and would be a lot slower than younger tree's.Josh wrote: I assume leaf reduction was from defoliation. When do you do this and do you do total or partial defoliation.
Looking good, please keep us updated.
When the new buds start to burst, could you defoliate then

Regards Ray
- bodhidharma
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 5007
- Joined: August 13th, 2009, 1:14 pm
- Favorite Species: English Elm
- Bonsai Age: 24
- Bonsai Club: goldfields
- Location: Daylesford, Victoria....Central Highlands
- Been thanked: 11 times
- Contact:
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..



"Advice is rarely welcome, and the one's who need it the most welcome it the least"
- Ray M
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 1403
- Joined: November 5th, 2009, 3:36 pm
- Favorite Species: Figs, Junipers, Maples, Elms, Pines, Banksias
- Bonsai Age: 31
- Bonsai Club: The School of Bonsai
- Location: Winston Hills NSW
- Been thanked: 16 times
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
Hi Bodhi,bodhidharma wrote:Good question and let me try to understand it. Do you mean that when the FIRST bud swells ready to burst into leaf in Spring, immediately cut it off ad see what happens
If so i would have to first see if the bud underneath is there or does it need the leaf to be out before the bud forms. My head hurts.
First let me say mate, I don't have any experience with this species. I guess this is a real learning curve for both of us. My initial thoughts were to remove the old leaf just as the new buds burst. What I don't know, is whether the new leaf is already carrying the same DNA as the previous leaves and would result in the same size leaf. Hope this makes sense.

Regards Ray
- Josh
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 1518
- Joined: January 9th, 2012, 9:28 pm
- Favorite Species: pines
- Bonsai Age: 4
- Bonsai Club: Mt Waverly
- Location: Mornington Peninsular, VIc
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 16 times
- Contact:
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
Cheers mate, good to know. After Rays comments might put one aside to play with.bodhidharma wrote:Hi Josh, no you cannot defoliate corylus as they won't leaf out again.It has been my experience that when you defoliate, the bud underneath does not mature and leaf out. The tree goes into a kind of dormancy (which does not seem to hurt them) and the bud just sits there, which does not look to bad. Minimum feeding and skipping a repot for a couple of years has done it. Remember though, mine is an old tree and would be a lot slower than younger tree's.Josh wrote: I assume leaf reduction was from defoliation. When do you do this and do you do total or partial defoliation.
Looking good, please keep us updated.
Josh
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 3
- Joined: November 2nd, 2014, 8:12 pm
- Favorite Species: elms
- Bonsai Age: 6
- Location: South Coast NSW
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
Beautiful tree with beautiful story. The texture on that trunk is awesome. I would love to have something with so much character. It seems the edge of life brings out something special. Hope it enjoys the new life you have given
- Rintar
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 570
- Joined: April 11th, 2012, 11:22 pm
- Favorite Species: all mostly natives
- Bonsai Age: 6
- Bonsai Club: Newcastle (paid but not regular)
- Location: Newcastle
- Has thanked: 96 times
- Been thanked: 40 times
- Contact:
Re: corylus avellana literati or not literati..
Fantastic love it no comment on lit or not ..
Regards Jason
Not yet a Novice but keen to be one
https://www.instagram.com/backyardbonsaiaustralia/
WARNING: I suffer from ideaphoria. This post may contain untested ideas, errors, and excessive enthusiasm.
Not yet a Novice but keen to be one
https://www.instagram.com/backyardbonsaiaustralia/
WARNING: I suffer from ideaphoria. This post may contain untested ideas, errors, and excessive enthusiasm.