Why it's important to keep your hand on a tree
Posted: December 15th, 2014, 6:18 am
This Chinese Maple I bought from a commercial nursery about 24 years ago in a bag. I never really grafted with the tree and basically I fertilized it, trimmed it from time to time and watered it. About 8 years ago I wanted to start training the tree and could not bend a single branch. They had become so hard that they were not budging without breaking. Wasted tree, so to speak. What I am now forced to do is to shorten the branches to the first leaves and start building branches with some movement from scratch. Difficult to do, but I am airlayering what branches I can and making Shohin or mame bonsai from them.
Here is the tree, which clearly needs some significant work done on it.
Lesson is that best to do the work early as not to waste two decades and still not have the tree you want. This tree has very little taper and as a formal upright is still not likely to become anything significant. Possibly the only thing I will get out of it are the mame bonsai.
The mame bonsai on this post was potted in the small Japanese pot (15cm) this season. Many years of work to follow. At the moment I am merely wanting to establish it in the pot.
Here is the tree, which clearly needs some significant work done on it.
Lesson is that best to do the work early as not to waste two decades and still not have the tree you want. This tree has very little taper and as a formal upright is still not likely to become anything significant. Possibly the only thing I will get out of it are the mame bonsai.
The mame bonsai on this post was potted in the small Japanese pot (15cm) this season. Many years of work to follow. At the moment I am merely wanting to establish it in the pot.