olive question
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 66
- Joined: April 5th, 2013, 2:53 pm
- Bonsai Age: 0
- Location: Sydney
olive question
hey guys I realized last night I have a few decent sized African olives at the place im renting. I need to keep some of them for privacy but there is one in particular I'd like to get some stumps from, I know that its possible to cut the roots off an olive and get it to throw out new roots, but can I cut it up into multiple sections and get them all too root, so if I had a straight trunk that's 90cm long can I cut it into three 30cm sections and expect each one too root?? or is it only the very bottom piece that roots?? If I can root each separate section I should be able to get at least 15 or more stumps ranging from about 8 inch in diameter to an inch
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 21
- Joined: May 23rd, 2012, 6:50 pm
- Bonsai Age: 8
- Bonsai Club: Oyama
- Location: Cape Town
Re: olive question
Paul you should have a good strike rate at this time of year.
Shave a small 45 degree chamfer around the base with a very sharp blade to expose more of the cambium and pot up in pure course river sand. Warm place and plenty of water.
Good luck
Shave a small 45 degree chamfer around the base with a very sharp blade to expose more of the cambium and pot up in pure course river sand. Warm place and plenty of water.
Good luck
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 1404
- Joined: June 24th, 2010, 6:23 pm
- Favorite Species: The ones that don't die
- Bonsai Age: 15
- Bonsai Club: Oyama Bonsai Kai, Ausbonsai
- Location: Cape Town, South Africa
- Been thanked: 2 times
Re: olive question
+1Justin Hervey wrote:Paul you should have a good strike rate at this time of year.
Shave a small 45 degree chamfer around the base with a very sharp blade to expose more of the cambium and pot up in pure course river sand. Warm place and plenty of water.
Good luck
. . . . and you can add some rooting hormone to up your success rate. Be sure the seal the tops of each section with wood glue (that white alcolin stuff works well) to prevent moisture loss while new roots are being established. Theoretically you can water with willow water (water in which you've soaked the branches of willow tree), or water with water that has an asprin dissolved in it.
All that said, I'd have to question the desirability of trunk sections like this for good bonsai stock. Are they really interesting with taper and movement, or are you gonna end up with rooted 'pipes'?
Cheers
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 66
- Joined: April 5th, 2013, 2:53 pm
- Bonsai Age: 0
- Location: Sydney
Re: olive question
thanks guys I appreciate your help.
Andrew there are some interesting bits up higher but the main truck is pretty straight and boring. I might just take a couple of fat pipes so I can practice carving, and get the 2 or 3 interesting parts up higher to keep as future stock.
either way im planning on taking a drive out to Camden this weekend to see if I can find some decent Olives to dig up
Andrew there are some interesting bits up higher but the main truck is pretty straight and boring. I might just take a couple of fat pipes so I can practice carving, and get the 2 or 3 interesting parts up higher to keep as future stock.
either way im planning on taking a drive out to Camden this weekend to see if I can find some decent Olives to dig up
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 718
- Joined: March 15th, 2012, 7:54 pm
- Favorite Species: Olive
- Bonsai Age: 20
- Bonsai Club: A realy good one :D
- Location: South Australia
- Been thanked: 3 times
Re: olive question
this what can be done with a olive
its shot from the base nothing up top yet but is still suporting a live section right to the top tho so
after all i just need one shoot
viewtopic.php?f=104&t=11460









viewtopic.php?f=104&t=11460
-
- Aussie Bonsai Fan
- Posts: 244
- Joined: November 10th, 2011, 8:05 pm
- Bonsai Age: 8
- Bonsai Club: Bendigo
- Location: Bendigo
- Contact:
Re: olive question
You can just stick them in a bucket of water then plant them in a month and still get them to grow. Its the way I've done it before. 

Patience is often a surprise.