abqjoe
Chumono
Another nice tree for the collection. You've been busy!
Yeah this is only my third month into bonsai and when I went outside last night to give my tree's some love I couldn't help but think just how quickly this hobby escalated lol.
Another nice tree for the collection. You've been busy!
Fedex seems to have inconsistent care from region to region. I have not shipped as many trees west as I have along the east coast, but the NJ hub for Fedex seems to be completely WORTHLESS. The beat the crap out of boxes, deliver to the wrong addresses... I am about to just swear off using Fedex all together! You were fortunate for sure, it sounds like your local Fedex people are terrible. I'd request stuff to be mailed USPS or UPS from now on if I were you... Might cost a few dollars more but it might reduce the amount of damage to your packages.
Insurance.Yeah I'm completely done with FedEx at this point! Don shipped me 5 tree's in 2 boxes via USPS and they arrived without so much as a scratch on them.
Don't know if that would hold true for FedEx, though. I've insured with FedEx, and had similar problems.UPS shipping
This is a mighty ambitious collection you've amassed for only 3 months in. Do you have someone locally who can give you guidance with these trees?Yeah this is only my third month into bonsai and when I went outside last night to give my tree's some love I couldn't help but think just how quickly this hobby escalated lol.
This is a mighty ambitious collection you've amassed for only 3 months in. Do you have someone locally who can give you guidance with these trees?
He's got some help with the soil for next yearNothing like plunking down a bunch of money on advanced trees as a beginner. I did the same, although it was only a single expensive tree, when I started out.
Had to learn very, very, VERY quickly or face some pissed off family members. I think your biggest challenge is going to be insuring those shohin trees don't dry out.
Good luck!
We're at 97 today and mid 90s for the foreseeable future. Luckily (or unluckily) we have accompanying oppressive humidity. That keeps pots from drying out, but the high temps can fry roots in only partial sun at those temperatures. I cover pots in the sun with towels all day to help with the heat.He's got some help with the soil for next year. But definitely has to keep them happy the rest of this year! We're in the 100's again this week so those little maples need FULL shade right now as they acclimate.
Aaron
Nothing like plunking down a bunch of money on advanced trees as a beginner. I did the same, although it was only a single expensive tree, when I started out.
Had to learn very, very, VERY quickly or face some pissed off family members. I think your biggest challenge is going to be insuring those shohin trees don't dry out.
Good luck!
There's no full sun for our trees here unless they are conifers or super heat tolerant like crape myrtle. Most trespass need morning sun with at least 50% shade cloth by noon or things will start burning, no matter how much you water them. Most my trees get morning sunn until 10 then 50% shade until about 2 then full shade until sun set, everything seems to like it.We're at 97 today and mid 90s for the foreseeable future. Luckily (or unluckily) we have accompanying oppressive humidity. That keeps pots from drying out, but the high temps can fry roots in only partial sun at those temperatures. I cover pots in the sun with towels all day to help with the heat.
Unless it's not. Steep learning curve and a possibly challenging climate to learn in.You always make stuff sound bad lol. Relax, it'll all be fine...![]()
Unless it's not. Steep learning curve and a possibly challenging climate to learn in.
Nothing ups your game in this hobby faster then dumping a large chunk of money on one or more high end or collected trees. It's good and bad, because you do tend to learn more quickly then you would with the typical beginner stock, but you'll lose sleep over screwing up. I've lost more then a few good trees over the years and it killed me every time. Like Aaron said, the op needs to keep the deciduous trees in the shade and out of the sun while figuring out the best location and watering schedule for them. They're all nice specimens and would fall into the "I can't believe it died!" category for me, at least.Lol, I thought I was pessimistic.
I'm not forgetting the real and logical implications but enthusiasm and optimism is usually a good helper.
Enthusiasm and overly optimistic attitudes have killed more bonsai than realism. Both actually have to be reined in. The impulse driven by enthusiasm lead to overcare, too much water and "love." Benign neglect is best for bonsai. Optimism often leads to dangerous rationalization--such as "everything will be OK. That grey green foliage on that juniper doesn't mean anything."Lol, I thought I was pessimistic.
I'm not forgetting the real and logical implications but enthusiasm and optimism is usually a good helper.
Enthusiasm and overly optimistic attitudes have killed more bonsai than realism. Both actually have to be reined in. The impulse driven by enthusiasm lead to overcare, too much water and "love." Benign neglect is best for bonsai. Optimism often leads to dangerous rationalization--such as "everything will be OK. That grey green foliage on that juniper doesn't mean anything."