New Chinese Elm
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New Chinese Elm
My new chinese elm. It arrived today, potted it straight up. I forgot to take a picture of the roots, but they are super healthy, lots of feeder roots. Going to give it a season to come to terms with being uprooted and potted up before styling I think, although as it is just budding up it might be worth a shot now?
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Last edited by GreenThumb on August 18th, 2014, 9:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: New Chinese Elm
Good stock, well selected. Give it time to recover is my suggestion.
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- Rory
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Re: New Chinese Elm
Chinese Elms are pretty darn hardy, but if you've just taken it out of the ground, I wouldn't work on it for a while too.
Rory
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I style Bonsai naturally, just as they would appear in the wild.
Central Coast, NSW
Bonsai: Casuarina Leptospermum Banksia Phebalium Baeckea Melalueca Ficus
Growing Australian natives as Bonsai: viewtopic.php?p=289480#p289480
Buying and repotting Native nursery material: viewtopic.php?f=78&t=30724
Growing tips for Casuarina as Bonsai: viewtopic.php?p=244995#p244995
How to reduce moss from the trunk without damaging the bark: viewtopic.php?p=295227#p295227
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Re: New Chinese Elm
Thanks for the replies. I'll definitely let it tick over for a season. It will give me time to deal with the tough decisions, be brave, cut low and start again or cut higher and manage the branches to get the desired shape.
- kcpoole
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Re: New Chinese Elm
they are hard decisionsGreenThumb wrote:Thanks for the replies. I'll definitely let it tick over for a season. It will give me time to deal with the tough decisions, be brave, cut low and start again or cut higher and manage the branches to get the desired shape.

Ken
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Re: New Chinese Elm
I have a similar bare rooted ground grown elm I acquired recently. Longish trunk with some movement but not much taper and a few thick branches. I've stuck it in a grow box and plan to air layer off some of the more interesting sections on my way to reducing it down to the base from which I hope to build a decent tree eventually. I'd think about doing this, makes it easier to chop it down when your getting a few trees out of it.GreenThumb wrote:It will give me time to deal with the tough decisions, be brave, cut low and start again or cut higher and manage the branches to get the desired shape.
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Re: New Chinese Elm
You might consider taking one of the upper trunks off, so there is only one line going to the top. It's a nice fluid trunk, you wouldn't want it a lot thicker.
Gavin
Gavin
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Re: New Chinese Elm
Thanks for the suggestions, most appreciated. The two top branches are definitely going, I hadn't considered air layering, still new to the game and will read into it.
Cheers
J
Cheers
J