You are most welcome.
It seems fair to say the new media,
even with the addition is mostly compost. This is concerning as
@Shibui alluded to above. Common practice is to use a more wholly inorganic mix.
The reason the big Chinese Elm shown was just about completely water washed was the media had a bark component that evolved into what could be considered as compost over time. This media wouldn’t drain properly. The interstitial spaces were filled up with the tiny particles. This no space for flushing the off gassed CO2 and replacing it with O2. This makes the media more acidic and unfriendly to the microorganisms most preferred by the trees. Hard for the roots to get O2 and really difficult to water properly.
Here’s an image of the media we removed. (We water wash and study media remnants, then heat and recycle media if possible). Note this media has a much higher inorganic component than the one shown for your tree plus the modification mentioned. It wasn’t working.
………Old Media…………………. one common bonsai mix
Not saying the tree will not live in the media chosen. Yet will not grow as robust over time.
If it were our tree we’d immediately pull the tree, carefully clean out the most of the media from the roots… as Chinese Elm roots are very fragile. Then repot in an organic media being as careful as possible. And in Seattle area put on a heat mat or heating bed until weather moderates.
But your tree, your choice.
btw: We use aluminum wire tie downs for Chinese Elms and azaleas and a few other trees rather than steel as I think
@pandacular recommended. If not careful one can easy cut through the delicate surface roots with it.
For future goals, a couple ideas:
1. Grow the tree out with no pruning whatsoever until fall to gain strength. It should look like a shaggy dog if things go well. Sharpen those bonsai scissors, oil them up and put them away.
2. Water carefully. Let the media get near dry, then water again.
3. Start fertilization slow when weather abates. Perhaps miracle gro 1/2 strength to start and Osmocote 1/2 amount of pellets. See how the tree responds before upping the dose.
4. Join your local bonsai club. There will be experienced folks to help guide you through recovery and eventually styling.
5. Post the tree’s progress here! We love to see how folks are doing.
Cheers
DSD sends