Bonsai Orange County
Mame
Would love to see more videos on the dawn redwood forest. I also have one and not a whole lot of info on them. Enjoying the videos!
Should have a fall update on these - I repotted them all with more space to thicken up for 2 years. They’ll be re-combined spring 2023 into their final planting with about 11-12 trees minimum. Thanks for watching!Would love to see more videos on the dawn redwood forest. I also have one and not a whole lot of info on them. Enjoying the videos!
Do you have any experience with Eastern Hemlock? I’m gearing up for a repot on my collected one this Spring.Should have a fall update on these - I repotted them all with more space to thicken up for 2 years. They’ll be re-combined spring 2023 into their final planting with about 11-12 trees minimum. Thanks for watching!
I don’t - somewhere on Bnut are some threads mentioning EH - I love them in the wild, just saw some massive hemlock up north. Haven’t pushed to collect these, and have heard they are difficult to work with. I’d love to see what you have! They are beautiful.Do you have any experience with Eastern Hemlock? I’m gearing up for a repot on my collected one this Spring.
Thread 'Tsuga canadensis collected'I don’t - somewhere on Bnut are some threads mentioning EH - I love them in the wild, just saw some massive hemlock up north. Haven’t pushed to collect these, and have heard they are difficult to work with. I’d love to see what you have! They are beautiful.
Much potential in the collected hemlock, wow. Following that threadThread 'Tsuga canadensis collected'
Thread 'Depot Eastern Hemlock'
I haven’t found them particularly hard to work with, but there is very little “institutional” knowledge on their care and training. I play it safe for the most part, and 2/2 on survival so far, not counting the air layer attempt.
Beech is really strong, did some light wiring this spring. Probably have a progression on that one next spring/summer with pruning/styling. Hornbeam didn’t make it per the video if you scroll up, will be going back for another next spring. Did get a few small volunteers.How are those collected hornbeams and beech coming along
Thanks for checking them out, plenty mistakes for people to learn from and a couple successes too.Just came across these videos. Good stuff. Thanks
As a newbie, it's really easy to misunderstand what is being conveyed. This leads to mistakes and learning. Much easier to learn off of other people's mistakes. I try to post my mistakes as well in the hopes that others won;t do the same.plenty mistakes for people to learn from and a couple successes too.
Great stuff. Love the Dawn Redwood video, & the Founders Brewery flag, and did I hear that correctly that you got the Redwood from The Flower Market? I live less than 15min from The Flower market.Thanks for checking them out, plenty mistakes for people to learn from and a couple successes too.
Got that founders flag after one too many reds rye ipasGreat stuff. Love the Dawn Redwood video, & the Founders Brewery flag, and did I hear that correctly that you got the Redwood from The Flower Market? I live less than 15min from The Flower market.![]()
Thanks for the input Leo! Always appreciated.Could be. Elm, each side of leaf blade inserts to petiole unevenly at proximal end. Elms have uneven leaf blade bases. Ostrya, leaf blades are perfectly symmetrical. Obviously flowering structure is the final tip off, bark looks right for Ostrya. You should e noticed wood was harder to cut than typical elm . Ostrya wood is even harder than Carpinus. So collection should have felt different.
That is a cool species for bonsai. I collected seed from southern Illinois. It took 2 years to germinate, cold,warm, then cold stratification. I did it the easy way. Planted a flat with seed, wired down hardware cloth to keep our squirrels, forgot about it, second summer had seedlings sprout. They are now 5 years old, so still don't look like much.
You have some good projects going and I really like your videos.