Unidentified tree - Suitable for bonsai?
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- Aussie Bonsai Fan
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Unidentified tree - Suitable for bonsai?
Gday,
I have a tree (pictured) in my front yard that I have been thinking of digging up as my next bonsai project. I don't know what sort of tree it is, however it has small green leaves and small white flowers and because of the size of its leaves and flowers i think it would be very suitable for bonsai. Can anyone tell me what sort of tree/plant it is. A friend of mine said he believed it was actually a 'weed'.
Anyway I am removing it as I am installing a rain chain from the down pipe and it is in the way. Its about 1.5 meters tall with an interesting trunk base. I have never dug before and am needing some help on how to do this best for the tree (so it survives etc..) Any ideas out there?? Thought I would just put it out there as I was over sitting on the verandah contemplating it!
Any help would be terrific,
I have a tree (pictured) in my front yard that I have been thinking of digging up as my next bonsai project. I don't know what sort of tree it is, however it has small green leaves and small white flowers and because of the size of its leaves and flowers i think it would be very suitable for bonsai. Can anyone tell me what sort of tree/plant it is. A friend of mine said he believed it was actually a 'weed'.
Anyway I am removing it as I am installing a rain chain from the down pipe and it is in the way. Its about 1.5 meters tall with an interesting trunk base. I have never dug before and am needing some help on how to do this best for the tree (so it survives etc..) Any ideas out there?? Thought I would just put it out there as I was over sitting on the verandah contemplating it!
Any help would be terrific,
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- Jarrod
- Treat em mean
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Re: Unidentified tree - Suitable for bonsai?
I think th common name is mock orange but that's all I can tell you, not sure how it goes budding on very old wood.
Jarrod
Treat 'em mean, keep 'em green.
Treat 'em mean, keep 'em green.
- Espresso
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Re: Unidentified tree - Suitable for bonsai?
Hi there, it could be a Philadelphus Belle Etoile.
The pruning and up keep should be similar to an Azalea....I'm not sure how this would go as a Bonsai, i would just dig it up end of season and put it in a tub, prune back hard and see how it goes.
Grant
The pruning and up keep should be similar to an Azalea....I'm not sure how this would go as a Bonsai, i would just dig it up end of season and put it in a tub, prune back hard and see how it goes.
Grant
- Jamie
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Re: Unidentified tree - Suitable for bonsai?
Jarrod wrote:I think th common name is mock orange but that's all I can tell you, not sure how it goes budding on very old wood.
your looking for murraya paniculata jezz, i think it is a cultivar of that as well, the flowers are the same as mine but the leaves are a bit different. i would be leaning to murraya though, same growth style in the trunk/s as mine aswell.
jamie

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- nilushi
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Re: Unidentified tree - Suitable for bonsai?
Yes. I also think it is a species of Pittosporum,Pittosporum heterophyllum.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pitto ... hyllum.jpg
Nilushi
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pitto ... hyllum.jpg
Nilushi
- Mojo Moyogi
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Re: Unidentified tree - Suitable for bonsai?
Hi Hutch,
It's Choysia ternata - Mexican Orange Blossom, tough as old boots, re-shoots from brutal pruning, it can get a little weedy. I'm not sure how it would do in bonsai cultivation, the leaves are arranged in whorls which would make refining foliage a little awkward, but why not give it a go, you have nothing to lose.
Cheers
MM
It's Choysia ternata - Mexican Orange Blossom, tough as old boots, re-shoots from brutal pruning, it can get a little weedy. I'm not sure how it would do in bonsai cultivation, the leaves are arranged in whorls which would make refining foliage a little awkward, but why not give it a go, you have nothing to lose.
Cheers
MM
...Might as well face it, I'm addicted to Shohin...
"Any creative work can be roughly broken down into three components- design, technique and materials. Good design can carry poor technique and materials but no amount of expertise and beautiful materials can save poor design". Andrew McPherson - Furniture designer and artist
"Any creative work can be roughly broken down into three components- design, technique and materials. Good design can carry poor technique and materials but no amount of expertise and beautiful materials can save poor design". Andrew McPherson - Furniture designer and artist
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- Aussie Bonsai Fan
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Re: Unidentified tree - Suitable for bonsai?
Thanks Mojo, what is meant by the leaves are arrnged in whorls??
- bonscythe
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Re: Unidentified tree - Suitable for bonsai?
Leaves in whorls means that the leaf nodes occur in a ring around the stem (like some Banksia sp.), not alternate (like Eucalyptus spp.)
You will get a bunch of leaves originating in a circle around the stem.
You will get a bunch of leaves originating in a circle around the stem.