ok guys

refreshed now after a big day yesterday

i will start with pup
you put a very interesting point here with established trees versus training and grow on trees, as you stated 96% of your trees are established and you arent after massive growth just keeping them happy and healthy, hence you are feeding a less N and P but more K. i can understand this as you are after more of a controlled growth not booming growth to add girth, height and branching.
now i wil throw this on for ya pup, when ou do a restyle and cut one of your established trees right back or down (if you do) to re develop the trees, maybe even one of your "oh bugger" moments i would presume your fert regime changes from low NP high K, to a more rounded mix of NPK say that of in a miracle grow mix or more??? after all if all branches of an established tree are cut buck to trunks to be restyled and changed i figure your fert regime must change accordingly??
graeme

mate you are very thorough in the response, much appreciated, as with pup aswell, covering alot in this its good.
i agree in a growth stage leaf size isnt an issue as you stated in pushes more food throughout the tree, leaf reduction techniques can be used in refinement stages of bonsai, now i dunno about big bonsai i am more of a shohin man myself (due to the fact my back cant lift big trees any more, but thats another story) but to get a good sized shohin tree we cant just expect to say buy a nursery stock tree with a trunk that is 3/8th of an inch thick and put it in a pot and call it shohin, (well you can if you like but this comes into height to trunk ratio's which is a different thing again) as i have been learning throughout my time to create a shohin you need a bigger tree to be chopped down from quite a large size tree for the nebari and trunk thckness to have the right perspective of height to trunk ratio, and then develop the tree from there, which brings me to why i started the thread of fertilisers, obviously a tree grows at the rate it grows but we can always help push it along by feeding it right and giving it the right conditions.
the reason i got the nitrogen as urea was A. i have been reading up on it and found what it produces and with strong leaf growth even being larger it helps with pushing energy into the tree, the bigger the leaf the more energy it can receive and produce food for the tree. i am still quite cuatious with it as i dont want to kill it from kindness, the next fert bags i will be getting will be of P and K, as i am starting to think if i can control the amounts of these ferts going into the trees i can be in control of everything that happens with the trees
as for dynamic lifter i still havent got it yet, i may be over cuatious as i have heard of mixed results being from putting to much on too quickly. when i get the stuff it will be a gradual adjustment of putting it on, a bit more everytime it needs it unlit it is at the stage i think neccessary. i think this is the best way.
as for trace elements after reading what you have stated i think i will back off with this as i agree that they are in other liquid ferts like miracle gro and such.
my reasoning behind it was the trace elements container stated they can be used every two weeks, maybe i should read again as that may not be for potted plants, i sort of figured the leaching rates may have been an issue with this??
i think personally once i have dynamic on the soils of my trees in there growth stages and the chemical ferts i am using i might be getting somewhere close to the right amounts, i am even thinking of fertbaskets with slow release to go on them aswell of mixing up fert cakes to go on the soils, this would i think cover the fertiliser needs of growth trees somewhere close to where they should be and not be under fertilising.
i still think there is a lot to cover, including reverse osmosis which was a question from waltron, now i answered a little bit of it but i think that there is more to it than what i answered, although i dont think it is possible from slow release ferts but with luquid ferts and slow releases mixed in it might be a different story, i think that is why it is so important to mix as per directed or even a little less depending on what is on/in the soil/medium of your trees, if you have a massive amount of dynamic on top of your soil along with slow release baskets and cakes and then you go and mix a liquid fert that is way to strong say 5 times the strength of reccomended dilution rates, then i think there could be some troubles, but that also depends on how long it sits in the medium.soil for, if it is a free draining mix and watering is needed three times in the day you have fertilised due to extreme heats then i beleive that you wouldnt have an issue because you would leach alot through the watering. now if the soil.medium is rententative or bogged up and it holds moisture which has the liquid fert in it then i think that reverse osmosis could be an issue. its never a good thing if the tree needs to reverse its intake of water and nutrients to an outflow of water to try and balance the soils nutrient levels so it isnt as high as what the tree has then that tree is going to be in trouble very quickly, if you feel like this could be a problem i think dunk watering and leaving the pot to soak for a fair while ( a good couple of hours) will allow the soil nutrient levels to balance out.
this is just my thoughts on it, i havent had an issue with reverse osmosis but i think what i just described may have covered it???? if i have missed anything guys, please add to it
cheers
jamie
