GreatLakesBrad
Chumono
Beyond thrilled with my recent collecting trip in northern Michigan. (Upper LP)
A close friend’s family owns 5-10 acres adjacent to an inland lake, mostly a bog leading to the beach. Incredible setting. Thousands of Tamarack, thuja Occidentalis, and hemlock.
everything seems ancient there. What blew my mind is the naturally occurring and prevalent sphagnum moss. the stuff I pay for from new zealand or Canada. I didn’t take any for fear of impacting the ecosystem but golly. Long fibered beauty.
I’ll be posting a collecting video at some point on my humble beginner channel (Great Lakes bonsai on YouTube) but wanted to share the two biggest pieces.
First, a larch (tamarack here in the mitten, Larix laricina) that had the most ancient looking bark I saw there - a bit of inverse taper, lacking a thick root system (how all of my larches I collected were... so concerned for survival) but unique and with many healthy branches. Thinking I need to prune a fair amount off considering the root reduction.
Second, a thuja that is even better below the now soil line. Large with plenty of natural deadwood. Love the root base character. Solid root system and left most of core root ball and soil intact.
A close friend’s family owns 5-10 acres adjacent to an inland lake, mostly a bog leading to the beach. Incredible setting. Thousands of Tamarack, thuja Occidentalis, and hemlock.
everything seems ancient there. What blew my mind is the naturally occurring and prevalent sphagnum moss. the stuff I pay for from new zealand or Canada. I didn’t take any for fear of impacting the ecosystem but golly. Long fibered beauty.
I’ll be posting a collecting video at some point on my humble beginner channel (Great Lakes bonsai on YouTube) but wanted to share the two biggest pieces.
First, a larch (tamarack here in the mitten, Larix laricina) that had the most ancient looking bark I saw there - a bit of inverse taper, lacking a thick root system (how all of my larches I collected were... so concerned for survival) but unique and with many healthy branches. Thinking I need to prune a fair amount off considering the root reduction.
Second, a thuja that is even better below the now soil line. Large with plenty of natural deadwood. Love the root base character. Solid root system and left most of core root ball and soil intact.
Attachments
-
1E051CA7-01D9-4196-B358-370421DB8D4A.jpeg201.9 KB · Views: 126
-
C6D97ED2-8EC1-4E97-9D01-79C8F667DBAA.jpeg302.1 KB · Views: 124
-
1FA1C7CB-73AC-4B01-854F-6158C0B1DCB9.jpeg191.2 KB · Views: 119
-
5E75E4DA-3DDB-4870-B2F7-0A296979F500.jpeg214.1 KB · Views: 116
-
739A414E-5DE9-4C58-ABC7-E8E9B995DEEC.jpeg195.1 KB · Views: 115
-
AC95D752-6CD5-4F4F-99C0-F15A6CFA248D.jpeg357.2 KB · Views: 112
-
5E96D6C8-682F-4CEE-9083-8A17A5060A3F.jpeg208.7 KB · Views: 108