Deep Sea Diver
Imperial Masterpiece
Root work Field test on 2 small Eastern Redbuds
Ok, I finally dug the 3 small Redbuds from last year out of cold storage. I received each from a TN nursery. After emptying two out of the pot, I recalled cutting the taproots off of each when I planted them up in pots.... 2 were in Boon mix, the other just in whatever I had around, bark, lava, pumice and some potting soil just for good measure. It was a trial to see if the species would take to bonsai soil. They loved to be watered and grew slowly all year. Medium sized sorta heart shaped leaves. Each survived the Puget Sound winter in a cold frame.
Both grew well above the surface, yet unpotting revealed that the Boon mix Redbud really put out more and bigger roots... about double the other mix... and stronger roots too. I don’t think these trees were markedly different in starting size.
View attachment 364619
As you can see, the Redbud puts out lots of fine fiberous roots, with fleshy feeder roots. They remind me of Chinese Elm roots In fleshiness and azalea roots in fiberousness (except not as tangled!).
I decided what the heck, since we’d rootworked over 60 maples, cherries etc a couple weeks ago, and there were plenty of smaller root plates around.... so I decided to see if these little guys could take to some full bore root work! Well, not as radical as the other trees we’d done as I got conservative and didn’t fully trim back the roots. I was a bit uncertain how this species would take to root work. Also I held one Redbud back in reserve just in case both test trials crashed and burned.
First image Boon mix etc, second poi puppy mix.
View attachment 364620 View attachment 364623
I cut back about 1/3 of the big roots on the Redbuds, just to to be able to get the tree down on the plate. Also I accidentally split the stem of the Boon mix one when screwing the tree down. Not so great technique! Yet it is a major hazard with fleshy roots and trunk trees though. I cut pasted the crack and buried it in small media. Hmm...
View attachment 364622
Both went in 1 gallon pots in Boon mix and were watered down, put in an open sky, low sun area of the yard. Now it’s wait to see what happens.
View attachment 364621
cheers
DSD sends
Ok, I finally dug the 3 small Redbuds from last year out of cold storage. I received each from a TN nursery. After emptying two out of the pot, I recalled cutting the taproots off of each when I planted them up in pots.... 2 were in Boon mix, the other just in whatever I had around, bark, lava, pumice and some potting soil just for good measure. It was a trial to see if the species would take to bonsai soil. They loved to be watered and grew slowly all year. Medium sized sorta heart shaped leaves. Each survived the Puget Sound winter in a cold frame.
Both grew well above the surface, yet unpotting revealed that the Boon mix Redbud really put out more and bigger roots... about double the other mix... and stronger roots too. I don’t think these trees were markedly different in starting size.
View attachment 364619
As you can see, the Redbud puts out lots of fine fiberous roots, with fleshy feeder roots. They remind me of Chinese Elm roots In fleshiness and azalea roots in fiberousness (except not as tangled!).
I decided what the heck, since we’d rootworked over 60 maples, cherries etc a couple weeks ago, and there were plenty of smaller root plates around.... so I decided to see if these little guys could take to some full bore root work! Well, not as radical as the other trees we’d done as I got conservative and didn’t fully trim back the roots. I was a bit uncertain how this species would take to root work. Also I held one Redbud back in reserve just in case both test trials crashed and burned.
First image Boon mix etc, second poi puppy mix.
View attachment 364620 View attachment 364623
I cut back about 1/3 of the big roots on the Redbuds, just to to be able to get the tree down on the plate. Also I accidentally split the stem of the Boon mix one when screwing the tree down. Not so great technique! Yet it is a major hazard with fleshy roots and trunk trees though. I cut pasted the crack and buried it in small media. Hmm...
View attachment 364622
Both went in 1 gallon pots in Boon mix and were watered down, put in an open sky, low sun area of the yard. Now it’s wait to see what happens.
View attachment 364621
cheers
DSD sends