If you're in Texas, the live oak sold in nurseries in North and East Texas
is probably NOT straight up southern live oak (quercus virginiana). Virginiana is coastal in the S.E. Quercus Fusiformis (escarpment live oak) is an upland species that is more common in Dallas, F.W. over to Tyler and down to Austin. The two species interbreed a lot in Texas. The area around Austin and that latitude in the state are the home of "Hybrid swarms" of cross bred oaks where the two species ranges intermix. The further north you go, fusiformis wins out over Virginiana because of drier, colder conditions. Fusiformis is a more drought and cold hardy live oak relative. It is all over east and north Texas. All those oak trees you see in Dallas and Tyler are fusiformis, not virginiana.
Fusiformis make excellent bonsai, much more so than straight southern live oak, since it is a tougher, more drought and cold tolerant tree. IF you can get decent roots on whatever you've got from a nursery or from the wild they adapt extremely well to bonsai culture. I've had a fusiformis as bonsai for almost 30 years. I've got a lot of family all over Texas and have been going there since I was a small kid, which ingrained live oak in my brain as a 'must have' bonsai subject. My tree was collected from the scrub near Salado. It was originally a 25-30 foot tree and reduced to a stump and dug up by a great pioneering bonsai collector.
FWIW, Don't bother with two or three year old seedlings. Look for larger material. Oak bonsai isn't worth having if it's spindly. Oak is treasured for its old ancient look. That means a substantial trunk. A seedling will take a decade or more of simple growing out to produce a decent trunk. If you're looking in nurseries, look for saplings with more substantial trunks (like over an inch, bigger is better). Fusiformis is cultured in east T
exas nurseries from gallon containers up to 500 gallons for landscaping purposes.
Here's mine. The polaroid pics are the tree when I got it. The others are 25 years down the road and in front of the cold greenhouse where I overwinter it.
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