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Spring

Posted: September 14th, 2012, 5:59 pm
by GavinG
Well, Spring's gone mad, here's some more of it.

P. blireana:
P1070341.jpg
Higo (?) camellia:
P1070344.jpg
P. cerasifera:
P1070355.jpg
Cydonia:
P1070527_2.jpg
and Forsythia:
P1070528_2.jpg
Enjoy,

Gavin

Re: Spring

Posted: September 14th, 2012, 9:57 pm
by MattA
A beautiful display Gavin.

The blireana is very nice, just missing the bottom of it ;) I think your right mine isnt one, you hit the nail on the head in another thread with P.glandulosa.

Is the camellia still in training or partly styled, it would be something special with those flowers. Yes its a higo, bit of hunting I may have a name for you 'Shiranui' http://www.camelliasrus.com.au/higos.htm

Re: Spring

Posted: September 14th, 2012, 10:26 pm
by shibui
Hi Gavin,
Lots of colour in your bonsai garden at this time of year.
The one you have labelled cydonia I would call Chaenomeles - Japanese flowering quince. Have the botanists been changing names and I have been left behind again?

Re: Spring

Posted: September 15th, 2012, 10:09 am
by bodhidharma
A lovely display Mr G. :tu: I particularly like the Forsythia. I gave a large onre in the garden that has captured my attention now. Where's the shovel :?:

Re: Spring

Posted: September 15th, 2012, 6:03 pm
by GavinG
Thank you gentlemen.

Matt, the rest of the blireana is awful. Yours may be "Elvins" - check out Bodhi's recent post. I think the camellia is "Tinsie" or something similar. It will be a bonsai in a century or so.

Neal, I can't keep up - whichever name comes to mind first gets typed.

Bodhi, I can't claim credit for the Forsythia - I found something half-dead in a nursery and didn't kill it. They're mad and wonderful for about 2 weeks. Maybe leave the shovel till next year...

Gavin

Re: Spring

Posted: September 15th, 2012, 9:44 pm
by Scott Roxburgh
Gavin,

Wow, nice time of year for your benches

Higo (?) camellia
I've never seen flowers anything like that, that is really cool! It'd make a unique bonsai.

Forsythia
A beautiful tree, with a bit of wire, some more ramification and a top quality pot that'd be a show stopper - REALLY NICE!

Re: Spring

Posted: September 15th, 2012, 9:50 pm
by shibui
Forsythia + ramification = very difficult

Re: Spring

Posted: September 16th, 2012, 9:40 am
by Scott Roxburgh
Why is that, does it die back on cut back? does it so dramatically on cutting?

Re: Spring

Posted: September 18th, 2012, 10:08 pm
by shibui
Scott,
In my limited experience with forsythia I find they have relatively long internodes, thick shoots and only shoot a few buds when cut back so forming ramification is proving slow and the results appear coarse and unappealing. The profuse flowers cover up a multitude of sins and distract from others so for a week or so each year nobody will notice :D

Re: Spring

Posted: September 20th, 2012, 8:05 pm
by GavinG
Scott, this is the kind of ramification Neal has in mind - the normal vigorous Forsythia. Ugly as sin, and not nearly so much fun.
P1070602.jpg
My old wreck is not strong, and puts out slender shoots. It flowers well enough.
P1070603.jpg
My feeling is that the trunk, for all its character, is slender, and a thicker more ramified head would not look balanced. The way the branches fall is gracefully "natural", and I'm not sure I'd improve it by meddling. It will get a solid chop in a week or two, back to the last/first two buds, and I may angle it, or even repot it (very gently) so the new growth is vertical, and harmonises with itself. I tend more towards clip-and-grow.

Gavin

Re: Spring

Posted: September 20th, 2012, 8:17 pm
by GavinG
And a bit more colour.

English/Public Servants' Elms about to bud:
P1070595.jpg
And doing whatever it is they do first, just around the corner where there's a bit more sun.
P1070601_2.jpg
Single cherries:
P1070582.jpg
This is a double red weeping peach, with deep red leaf buds. I'm layering bits off it, so we'll see what it does as bonsai in twenty years or so. Flowers are about 4cms across, so it will need to be a large tree.
P1070608.jpg
P1070611.jpg
Can anyone identify this crab apple? It's not floribunda, spectabilis or any of the purpureas. I've lost the label. Another layering candidate.
P1070614.jpg
Gavin