Port Jackson Fig Recovery
Posted: January 19th, 2012, 11:03 pm
I thought I'd share my progress with a PJF that I picked up last year. I bought it as a bonsai from a businesswoman who had used it for promotion outside her shop for a couple of years. It had been kept in full shade without any re-potting and I think it had once been partially yanked out of its pot when someone tried to steal it. As you could imagine, it was in need of some TLC!
I repotted it in November, back into the same pot using a mix of 50% akadama, 25% composted pine bark fines and 25% coarse sand. I also added six slow-release organic fertiliser biscuits that I'm trying out from Bonsai Emporium in Perth. The potting mix that it had been in was pretty bad, it looked like a regular gardeners potting mix and wasn't draining adequately. The rootball only reached the sides and bottom of the pot in a few places. Here's a picture of it just after re-potting:
I've been growing it in the open with fortnightly liquid fertiliser and not worrying too much about its form until it had recovered in health. Now I've started in on its design. I'm not aiming to change too much but I want to open up the canopy so we can see the trunks and branches between clouds of foliage. I'm using wire and props to align the trunks which had been crossing in places.
So what's next for this tree? I'd like to improve the nebari with additional roots on each side. There's an ugly place where a root has been hacked on the left... not sure how to deal with that. There's a scar which is about 3 - 4 inches long on the back-side of the largest trunk (you can see it on the first picture). It is about two inches from the bottom and I'm not sure whether to ignore it, try to induce aerial roots around it or clean it up?
Otherwise, I think i'll try to keep it going in the direction it's headed, with the mid-level branches spreading down and out so we can see in above them, getting some more ramification and development, and enjoy looking at it!
I've seen reference in these threads to defoliation of figs to improve ramification. This is something i haven't tried, so I'll have to check that out maybe for next summer.
Cheers for now, Andrew.
I repotted it in November, back into the same pot using a mix of 50% akadama, 25% composted pine bark fines and 25% coarse sand. I also added six slow-release organic fertiliser biscuits that I'm trying out from Bonsai Emporium in Perth. The potting mix that it had been in was pretty bad, it looked like a regular gardeners potting mix and wasn't draining adequately. The rootball only reached the sides and bottom of the pot in a few places. Here's a picture of it just after re-potting:
I've been growing it in the open with fortnightly liquid fertiliser and not worrying too much about its form until it had recovered in health. Now I've started in on its design. I'm not aiming to change too much but I want to open up the canopy so we can see the trunks and branches between clouds of foliage. I'm using wire and props to align the trunks which had been crossing in places.
So what's next for this tree? I'd like to improve the nebari with additional roots on each side. There's an ugly place where a root has been hacked on the left... not sure how to deal with that. There's a scar which is about 3 - 4 inches long on the back-side of the largest trunk (you can see it on the first picture). It is about two inches from the bottom and I'm not sure whether to ignore it, try to induce aerial roots around it or clean it up?

Otherwise, I think i'll try to keep it going in the direction it's headed, with the mid-level branches spreading down and out so we can see in above them, getting some more ramification and development, and enjoy looking at it!


Cheers for now, Andrew.