Flowering quince
- treeman
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 2877
- Joined: August 15th, 2011, 4:47 pm
- Favorite Species: any
- Bonsai Age: 25
- Location: melbourne
- Has thanked: 31 times
- Been thanked: 617 times
Flowering quince
A seedling of chojubai crossed with C. japonica. Now about 15 years (?)
The little white tag on the left is on the flower which I crossed back to chojubai this year.
Also crossed chojubai white with chojubai red three years ago. The first two to flower this spring have orange flowers.
Crosses this year will include speciosa white and speciosa pink with chojubai white. (= Chaenomeles x superba)
Whatever comes out they are all nice....
The little white tag on the left is on the flower which I crossed back to chojubai this year.
Also crossed chojubai white with chojubai red three years ago. The first two to flower this spring have orange flowers.
Crosses this year will include speciosa white and speciosa pink with chojubai white. (= Chaenomeles x superba)
Whatever comes out they are all nice....
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
Mike
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 7883
- Joined: August 22nd, 2009, 8:41 pm
- Favorite Species: trident maple
- Bonsai Age: 41
- Bonsai Club: Albury/Wodonga; BSV; Canberra; VNBC
- Location: Yackandandah
- Has thanked: 78 times
- Been thanked: 1597 times
- Contact:
Re: Flowering quince
Do you see any difference in growth, hardiness, etc in the crosses so far Mike or are you just looking for flower colour?
I'm also interested that crossing produces seed when the chojubai appears to not set seed normally. I may try some cross pollination here too but that's a very long term project.
I'm also interested that crossing produces seed when the chojubai appears to not set seed normally. I may try some cross pollination here too but that's a very long term project.
http://shibuibonsai.com.au/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
- Jason.S
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 119
- Joined: March 30th, 2010, 7:58 am
- Favorite Species: Acer & Prunus
- Bonsai Age: 16
- Bonsai Club: South Australian Bonsai Society
- Location: Adelaide, SA
- Has thanked: 1 time
Re: Flowering quince
Nice tree mate!
Only recently became interested in quince myself. Have no idea why it took me this long. Picked up a small one a few weeks ago to develop something similar for my own collection.
Only recently became interested in quince myself. Have no idea why it took me this long. Picked up a small one a few weeks ago to develop something similar for my own collection.
"There is much to learn, I have refined my skills, but mastered none"
- treeman
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 2877
- Joined: August 15th, 2011, 4:47 pm
- Favorite Species: any
- Bonsai Age: 25
- Location: melbourne
- Has thanked: 31 times
- Been thanked: 617 times
Re: Flowering quince
No difference in hardiness but the crosses are more vigorous than chojubai and not as fine. That's why I'm back-crossing. I'm looking for a pink chojubai- like plant mainly but anything unusual would be nice. The white choju is nothing like the red. I don't even know why they call it chojubai. It's more like a white form of japonica. True japonica grows to about a meter high and ''chojubai white'' seems to be just as vigorous. Speciosa can get to 2 or even three meters. I guess C x superba will be somewhere in between but ramify better than speciosa. The red Chojubai seems to be self sterile (maybe they all are?) but crosses very easily with anything else.shibui wrote: ↑August 3rd, 2022, 5:43 pm Do you see any difference in growth, hardiness, etc in the crosses so far Mike or are you just looking for flower colour?
I'm also interested that crossing produces seed when the chojubai appears to not set seed normally. I may try some cross pollination here too but that's a very long term project.
As for long term project, you are looking at about 4 years (sometimes 3) from sowing to flowering. So not too bad.
Mike
- treeman
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 2877
- Joined: August 15th, 2011, 4:47 pm
- Favorite Species: any
- Bonsai Age: 25
- Location: melbourne
- Has thanked: 31 times
- Been thanked: 617 times
- Robsterios
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 150
- Joined: October 2nd, 2014, 8:33 pm
- Favorite Species: Maple
- Bonsai Age: 15
- Bonsai Club: Mornington Peninsula BS, BSV
- Location: Mornington Peninsula - Victoria
- Has thanked: 3 times
- Been thanked: 29 times
- Contact:
Re: Flowering quince
The Peach colored versions you create are pretty special. Are they a mix of Chojubi and Speciosa? I have a clear pink single bloom Speciosa clump your welcome to take cuttings off.
- treeman
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 2877
- Joined: August 15th, 2011, 4:47 pm
- Favorite Species: any
- Bonsai Age: 25
- Location: melbourne
- Has thanked: 31 times
- Been thanked: 617 times
Re: Flowering quince
I have the pink speciosa thanks Rob. The other ones are chojubai x japonica.Robsterios wrote: ↑August 4th, 2022, 6:56 pm The Peach colored versions you create are pretty special. Are they a mix of Chojubi and Speciosa? I have a clear pink single bloom Speciosa clump your welcome to take cuttings off.
Mike
- treeman
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 2877
- Joined: August 15th, 2011, 4:47 pm
- Favorite Species: any
- Bonsai Age: 25
- Location: melbourne
- Has thanked: 31 times
- Been thanked: 617 times
Re: Flowering quince
This is the first flower (out of 12 plants) of chojubai white x red. I presume the others will be similar but you never know.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
Mike
- Mitch_28
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 115
- Joined: April 24th, 2018, 8:57 am
- Favorite Species: Cedrus Atlantics Glauca
- Bonsai Age: 1
- Location: Wollongong
- Been thanked: 8 times
Re: Flowering quince
Only just picked myself up a Quince too. Very pretty looking flowers!
Can definitely see how only one won't be enough

Sent from my SM-F926B using Tapatalk
Can definitely see how only one won't be enough


Sent from my SM-F926B using Tapatalk
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 490
- Joined: July 2nd, 2022, 4:10 am
- Favorite Species: Shimpaku
- Bonsai Age: 1
- Bonsai Club: Bonsai Northwest
- Location: Melbourne
- Has thanked: 193 times
- Been thanked: 68 times
Re: Flowering quince
How do you create the clump look on a chojubai? Do you have to start when they're really young seedlings / cuttings? Or can they be clumped together after they're a bit older?
Also, how can one tell whether a flowering quince is chojubai or not? I've tried to look it up online, and another forum mentioned that the bark on a chojubai will get a "corky" texture at 20-30 years.
Is there a method (aside from waiting 20-30 years) which will reveal whether a plant is chojubai or other?
Also, how can one tell whether a flowering quince is chojubai or not? I've tried to look it up online, and another forum mentioned that the bark on a chojubai will get a "corky" texture at 20-30 years.
Is there a method (aside from waiting 20-30 years) which will reveal whether a plant is chojubai or other?
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 1025
- Joined: September 15th, 2014, 8:04 pm
- Favorite Species: Juniper
- Bonsai Age: 8
- Location: Melbourne
- Has thanked: 17 times
- Been thanked: 106 times
Re: Flowering quince
Clump - they send suckers so it’s their natural growth.
Chojubai - they are a super dwarf variety. They have small leaves, tight internodes and even small flowers. You’ll know if you have one - just from the price (and the look).
There is a small pool of mother plants in Australia and suspect they all have mosaic virus and a tendency to die off - I imagine why people like Treeman are hybridising.
Nonetheless, very intriguing shrubs.
Chojubai - they are a super dwarf variety. They have small leaves, tight internodes and even small flowers. You’ll know if you have one - just from the price (and the look).
There is a small pool of mother plants in Australia and suspect they all have mosaic virus and a tendency to die off - I imagine why people like Treeman are hybridising.
Nonetheless, very intriguing shrubs.
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 7883
- Joined: August 22nd, 2009, 8:41 pm
- Favorite Species: trident maple
- Bonsai Age: 41
- Bonsai Club: Albury/Wodonga; BSV; Canberra; VNBC
- Location: Yackandandah
- Has thanked: 78 times
- Been thanked: 1597 times
- Contact:
Re: Flowering quince
As with many bonsai techniques there's a number of ways to do this too.How do you create the clump look on a chojubai? Do you have to start when they're really young seedlings / cuttings? Or can they be clumped together after they're a bit older?
As Daluke mentioned, Chojubai and most Chaenomeles sucker normally so method 1 is to wait for the plant to do it naturally.
Method 2 would be to prune hard to stimulate low regrowth.
Method 3 is to plant several individual plants close together and wait until they fuse or at least look like they are a single clump.
Chojubai also send out underground runners (rhizomes?) so new stems poke up through the soil, round the edge of the pot and sometimes out the drain holes. These can be cut off at repotting and they grow roots quite easily if you need more plants. If the suckers are left for a year or so these sucker stems will develop roots and can be removed and potted up or, if you are after a clump, bring them close to the original trunk (don't even need to cut the underground stem) to add more trunks.
Most of the larger clumps I've seen appear to be an exposed cluster of roots and sucker stems growing close together. I currently have a couple of chojubai in tall, narrow pots to see if that helps produce this style of quince cluster.
http://shibuibonsai.com.au/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 490
- Joined: July 2nd, 2022, 4:10 am
- Favorite Species: Shimpaku
- Bonsai Age: 1
- Bonsai Club: Bonsai Northwest
- Location: Melbourne
- Has thanked: 193 times
- Been thanked: 68 times
Re: Flowering quince
How thick a cutting can you take and still expect it to take root? Or is it better to air-layer chojubai, regardless of thickness?
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 1969
- Joined: May 21st, 2009, 3:42 pm
- Favorite Species: Flowering
- Bonsai Age: 12
- Bonsai Club: BSV
- Location: Melbourne
- Has thanked: 1168 times
- Been thanked: 248 times
Re: Flowering quince
Chojubai are barely thicker than a stick. So the cuttings will be thin. Chojubai are not like the Flowering Chaenomeles Quince which is much thicker.
Cheers
Kirky
Cheers
Kirky
Great oaks from little acorns grow.