Page 1 of 1
[ID] my upcoming bonsai
Posted: September 9th, 2012, 2:11 pm
by MrAwesome
Hello everyone, I'm very new to this forum and have just started wanting to learn all about the majestic art of bonsai. But to get off on the right foot, I'm needing to know exactly what i have so i can research everything i need to know about it. I've never planted anything before and am very worried i might kill it. Any help with this would be much appreciated thank you
Sent from my HTC One X using Tapatalk 2
[ID] my upcoming bonsai
Posted: September 9th, 2012, 2:24 pm
by kcpoole
Looks like Liquidambar styrafluacia to me. also know as American sweetgum.
check this search for some examples here
search.php?fid []=129
Ken
Re: [ID] my upcoming bonsai
Posted: September 9th, 2012, 7:52 pm
by Mojo Moyogi
kcpoole wrote:Looks like Liquidambar styrafluacia to me. also know as American sweetgum.
check this search for some examples here
search.php?fid []=129
Ken
x2
Mr A,
Liquidambars make very presentable bonsai, the down side is that they are best as medium to large trees (60cm+) due to the size of the leaves. It will take some time to achieve this.
Good luck.
Cheers,
Mojo
Re: [ID] my upcoming bonsai
Posted: September 9th, 2012, 8:32 pm
by MrAwesome
Thank you both for your advice. Would you happen to know how to start things off?
Re: [ID] my upcoming bonsai
Posted: September 9th, 2012, 10:30 pm
by kcpoole
MrAwesome wrote:Thank you both for your advice. Would you happen to know how to start things off?
Plant out in a the garden or a large pot and get some girth into the trunk. A few years in the ground will make it mauch larger and give you the option to trunck chop a few times to provide taper as well.
Growing from seed is long term way to get bonsai, but given the time can acieve great results.
LA make a really nice larger sized tree as the leaves do not easily reduce in size.
Look at the wiki on trunk chops to get you on the way to developing the trunck
Ken