This will be enjoyable if it gets off the ground. If there is anything I can do to help - let me know.

Bonsai teaches me patience.
I very much see your point. One of the greatest assets this site has is progression threads. It gives others a timeline perspective and realistic goals of how big a bonsai gets, patience, the process of branch ramification and what to expect over the years. I also find it wonderful because it shows that everyone is human and even people who can produce great bonsai have often made great mistakes.Mbunro wrote:id probably have a go too.. have nothing suitable at the moment, but any excuse to go out for a shop..
only suggestion i have is to keep it as 3 month updates instead of 6.
To me one of the best parts about the shohin comp entries is the ability to go back and see exactly what everyone did and when. and i think with updates only every 6 months the detail and accuracy (time wise) could be greatly reduced...
If the comp is allowed, there are a lot. Any council or native nursery should be able to recommend hardy material.gnichols wrote:I'm interested. Not having worked with Australian natives & being a novice in general, can anybody recommend an easy species to work on?
Sent from my SM-G570F using Tapatalk
G'day dansai. Yeah I get that. Essentially it just means you can use materail that has been repotted and/or cut the top off or has had foliage reduced. Similar to previous comps, it means it shouldn't have been styled yet.dansai wrote:I'ld be interested too. Some questions though;
What constitutes a trunk chop? I would rarely "trunk chop" a trunk less than 1cm, but would trim back to encourage bushing up or for taper.
A clump wouldn't be allowed if the base at the soil exceeds 1cm which it probably would.dansai wrote:
What about multi trunked specimens? If I have cut back all trunks to a side branch but haven't wired, then would that be OK?