
about 10 years in pot. it will look better when the trunk is taller. I don't think it will get thicker than this
Trunk diameter about 80mm.
Normal size..Some from Tassie can be a metre thick!
Your getting it! The plan down the road - if I live long enough - is to make a clump of three of them all with different heights.MJL wrote: ↑April 25th, 2020, 7:54 am On a more serious note ... at last to my initial response... I am intrigued.
When I first looked at this thread I thought "Yeah - a fern in a pot; Treeman's enjoying a few single malts in isolation, soon we'll get some photos of Neofinetia falcata as Bonsai."
But... as opposed to a serial poster general crud like me - I then thought "Hang on ... Mike is more reserved with his posts - mostly illustrating technique, excellent trees or blistering convention for the fun of the debate." Hmmm ....
So ... this Saturday morning, I now read more carefully. The trunk here is a mere 8cm. Under a tenth of the size of a mature wild tree.
The pot then may be what 20cm? I didn't notice this size in the photo - so perhaps this is part of the sorcery. I can imagine this tree being set against the background of your lush property and if the pot was not in picture - the magic of a photo would make it look like a full size tree.
But for the sake of discussion - is bonsai about miniaturisation or the perception of age (among other things) and are those topics always interdependent? My front of mind thought (with not a lot of analysis while I eat my taost) is even very old ferns (if viewed as s single tree) don't look overly old - probably due to the vibrant green growth. Even on towering tree ferns - you can see maturity but their fronds keeps them eternally young. Perhaps - come to think of it - they do look old when they have other stuff growing on there tall trunks (there's probably a horticultural name for 'other stuff').
Yet - put tree ferns en masse, in an understory of a forest and they add to a sense of great age - ancient even - almost prehistoric like. At least in my weird skull... that's what I think.
Now because I love Bonsai forests... is there any chance I could replicate the Dandenong Ranges for example .... combine Eucs with miniature ferns perhaps... now there's thought I might explore...
Anyway Mike - you've probably choked on your coco pops ... but what else was I going do do when I was easing my toast on a Saturday morning.
PS - When are your Neo's flowering? And ... when they are - can you perhaps drop a few photos in the Bonsai Cafe please.
That would be epiphytes and parasites (those that do and don't derive their nutrition from the 'host' plant)