craigw60 wrote:Hi Mitchell, Large scale carving work is usually performed on hardwood species such as juniper or apricot. The trouble with attempting these techniques on ficus is the very soft wood will be very difficult to maintain .One of the major advantages of ficus is their ability to heal large wounds quite quickly. This would be the approach I would take. You say you would never soften the lines between the large cutting and the new apex. I would say this could be easily achieved with say a 5 year intensive growing program. While you are doing the strong growing if you root prune correctly the trees will develop some basal flare at the same time.
What you have with your ficus cutting is some great starter material, time and correct growing techniques will turn them into good bonsai.
Craig
Ill quote this for truth.
Figs are tropical, tropical is usually wet and soft wood with wet is usually gone pretty fast. If you want to soften the line you can always add the the trunk itself via different grafting techniques using either direct cutting material/saplings (this last one being the better of the two) or aerial roots.
Doing this however you need high humidity, the results are so much better with it.
Personally I would not have bothered with cutting material from figs, they grow from seed much better and faster with none of the large wounds and taperless features. Taper will not be easy to grow in.
Young and hostile but not stupid.