Hi Sergio,
Welcome to the world of eastern white cedar... it is a beautiful yet often scary and frustrating place :) The shari on the branches is really next level... a testament to Suthin's professionalism. I'm looking forward to seeing your work on this tree.
As a side note, I'm actually...
I consider taking clear and regular pictures of your trees to be an extremely important part of bonsai. But it can be a pain sometimes.
I am not a good photographer and I have some large trees, so I've been taking a practical approach lately. I just hang an inexpensive retractable projector...
Good to know as we are in a similar climate. I have one maple in development that has been growing in pure soft akadama for two years. It seems to be loving it.
Hi Sergio,
I'm sure you've said this elsewhere but which specific type of akadama do you use straight? Exclusively the hard variety? Or do you find it even makes a difference?
A big factor is how old are these larches and what soil type are you collecting from?
If you are collecting non-ancient larches from bogs, fall collecting is known to be effective. Lenz advocates it but largely for practical reasons i.e. lower water table.
If you are collecting very old...
I don't think the Kennett sale should ever be compared to the normal north american market. Something like that will probably never happen again. Peter Warren said right before the door opened, (I paraphrase): "Many of these trees are the price of the pot they sit in. Many could theoretically be...
Yes thank you Vin. Good eye, since this picture I've bent the left jin so it points to the right, and I plan to completely remove the jin on the right. It still needs a decent amount of work.
Cheers
This one looks to have handled collection very well. I like the timeline you have planned for the tree. No need to rush things with these cedars.
Congratulations! It is a great piece of material. One of the best non-Canadian collected thuja I've seen!
Good idea for a thread... missed it when it started last year.
I have about 60 trees in total. Probably around 25 of them can be considered bonsai.
Three of my Top Trees (in no particular order)
1. What is the tree and who made it's pot?
Thuja occidentalis in a chinese production pot
2. How...
I think a lot of it depends on the species and it's level if development. For example, I only fertilize my more refined larches in the fall. They don't get any fertilizer from me otherwise throughout the year. The fall fert strengthens them up for the winter so they will bud out nicely in the...
I was not super convinced by this article. I would bet the revival of the juniper was mostly due to the repotting.
And I would be more impressed to see results on collected conifers. Hawthorns (same family as apple) and maples are notoriously easy to root.