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Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: December 30th, 2014, 10:09 pm
by Josh
I got this tree in Nov 2013. It cost me $4 from a nursery which had been closed down and was over grown. When I got home I repotted and found it had been potted really deep and had a thick base hiding under the soil (bonus). It has sat on my bench for the last 12 months growing nicely so time to do something with it.
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I bought three of these trees, gave one away and kept two. Unlike most Eucalyptus Sideroxylon these have really small leaves. They never grow bigger than 25-30mm. Makes them great for growing as smaller trees which you don't see a lot of.
Josh
Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: December 31st, 2014, 4:27 am
by lackhand
Looks good, Josh. I've been looking for one of these myself. Keen to watch it fill out over the next few years.
Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: December 31st, 2014, 8:07 am
by Watto
Nice progression, loved it. Great looking tree so I'm hopeful to see it mature over time. Well done.
Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: December 31st, 2014, 8:34 pm
by izzykay
Good score mate, Nice trunk. Amazing what can be hiding under the soil.

Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: January 1st, 2015, 9:19 am
by Josh
Thanks for the comments. This tree puts a lot of growth wanting to grow steaight up so hoping I can control the growth a bit better now and develop the branching over the next couple of years. I couldn't believe how deep the tree was planted in the pot or what was hiding under the soil. The leaves seen to stay small to so that's a bonus. I'll grow the branches out and try to get ramifacation on them now. Will update as I go.
Cheers
Josh
Oh and happy new year.
Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: January 1st, 2015, 12:00 pm
by PeterH
Josh ,
Good find. At what stage do you expect the adult bark to start developing. Why I ask is that mine has taken around 10 to 12 years grown on in a large pot.
It will be interesting to see whether it will develop the bark if kept at that size.
Regards,
Peter
Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: January 2nd, 2015, 4:50 pm
by Josh
PeterH wrote:Josh ,
Good find. At what stage do you expect the adult bark to start developing. Why I ask is that mine has taken around 10 to 12 years grown on in a large pot.
It will be interesting to see whether it will develop the bark if kept at that size.
Regards,
Peter
That's a good question Peter and one I'm not sure of the answer to. One of the main problems with keeping eucy's small is your constantly trimming and so you continually have young growth. We had this discussion at our native club meeting a while back. There were a lot of eucy's on display but most had immature foliage because of constant trimming. Bark is slightly different as you can get older branches and this get barking up. I have another eucy which is peeling all its bark at the moment and great. It's about 5-8 years old. Will be interesting to see how it goes getting it to bark up.
Josh.
Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: May 11th, 2015, 8:26 pm
by Josh
Time for an update on this eucy. It was displayed at the native symposium on Australia natives as bonsai recently at the Botanical Gardens. It was the only eucalyptus under 30cm, in fact probably the only tree under 1 mtr
About two weeks before the symposium it started peeling the heavy dark bark and reveal the lovely red iron bark just in time. The leaves are still small on this tree and do not get any bigger than 1-2 cm. I have not defoliated the tree at all yet the leaves stay small. I have had a nursery near work trying to propagate some cutting but hasn't had any luck yet.
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Not sure yet if it will stay in this rock or not. Pup suggested possibly a smaller pot would make it look more powerful and not get lost so maybe, but its happy for now and so am I.
Josh
Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: May 11th, 2015, 9:52 pm
by Elmar
Very nice tree, mate!
Cheers
Elmar
Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: May 11th, 2015, 10:08 pm
by hugh grant
I agree a smaller container will make this tree shine much better, it gets very lost in the rock. which compared to the tree is rather dull. The tree has some really lovely natural characteristics, even though it is so small, that would be great to see made the most of.
nice tree !
Hugh
Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: May 12th, 2015, 9:41 am
by Rory
Josh wrote: It was the only eucalyptus under 30cm, in fact probably the only tree under 1 mtr

funny.
On a side note...sorry, just my brain, but that last pic looks like an upright seated frog with a fancy dress hat.
I too think it is wasted on that slab. Love the trunk Josh. Ramify the heck out of it and keep it small, and then in time this will be a great tree.
Yeah, if you are going to change its pot, I wouldn't do it until Summer.
Plus,

I think Eucs look especially beautiful when they are peeling, in other words ; they look amazing as it enhances the aged look if the bark isn't all peeled, and is much more aesthetically pleasing to the eye. Just my

Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: May 12th, 2015, 9:55 am
by WoodWizard
I've grown sideroxolyn wholesale for many years and now makes me think how many great trees I could of attempted to bonsai !! I wonder if it's a straight sideroxolyn or a rosea, how many times have you defoliated?? Fantastic tree I'm so jealous
Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: May 12th, 2015, 6:01 pm
by Josh
hugh grant wrote:I agree a smaller container will make this tree shine much better, it gets very lost in the rock. which compared to the tree is rather dull. The tree has some really lovely natural characteristics, even though it is so small, that would be great to see made the most of.
nice tree !
Hugh
Thanks Hugh, thinking its going into a pot but where am I going to find a pot
bonsaibuddyman wrote:Josh wrote: It was the only eucalyptus under 30cm, in fact probably the only tree under 1 mtr

funny.
On a side note...sorry, just my brain, but that last pic looks like an upright seated frog with a fancy dress hat.
I too think it is wasted on that slab. Love the trunk Josh. Ramify the heck out of it and keep it small, and then in time this will be a great tree.
Yeah, if you are going to change its pot, I wouldn't do it until Summer.
Plus,

I think Eucs look especially beautiful when they are peeling, in other words ; they look amazing as it enhances the aged look if the bark isn't all peeled, and is much more aesthetically pleasing to the eye. Just my

Yeah tree won't get repotted till its warmer. It's buds out fairly easy so it should ramify easy enough. I have another eucy which peeled and looked amazing. The bark on this tree was really thick and didn't peel like they do normally. It just kind of came loose and fell off. Most of the trunk was buried in the pot so didn't look that nice compared to the new bark
WoodWizard wrote:I've grown sideroxolyn wholesale for many years and now makes me think how many great trees I could of attempted to bonsai !! I wonder if it's a straight sideroxolyn or a rosea, how many times have you defoliated?? Fantastic tree I'm so jealous
Thanks Woodwizard. It is "Rosea". This tree has never been defoliated. It's leaves are small naturally. It's a great little tree and I'm very happy with it considering it only cost me $4.
Josh.
Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: May 12th, 2015, 8:00 pm
by Isitangus
Let me start by saying great bones of the tree. I agree I think a new pot-perhaps needs to be a custom comission from an Aussie potter, would help set off the look. In addition for me I would lose the moss, and perhaps when it comes to display you could add some of the scattered peeling bark to make it look like a tree in the wild.
Just my 2c but whichever way you go I look forward to seeing it progress
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Re: Eucalyptus Sideroxylon
Posted: May 12th, 2015, 8:31 pm
by WoodWizard
This tree has never been defoliated. It's leaves are small naturally. It's a great little tree and I'm very happy with it considering it only cost me $4.
Josh.[/quote]
Wow !! Leaves on sideroxolyns naturally are much bigger than this id say comfortably double the size of yours, that's why I defiantly thought u must have defoliated, could be a seed
Variant that has worked into your favour !!! Jealous , we would do batches of 300 in 40cm pots and the variance between leaf size and even tree shape was huge ( much to the dismay of picky clients ) some would almost look exactly like a
Euc melliodora. This is why I love eucalyptus trees !!!!