Imagine how awesome it would look in that pot with some purple flowers.
Haha, next year, I hopeImagine how awesome it would look in that pot with some purple flowers.![]()
I actually have a couple nice ones I got from @milehigh_7, that have some crazy long branches that need tended to. But I want to see it bloom before chopping them off. You are just braver than I, and much more experienced. But flowers or not, I think that pot is perfect for it.Haha, next year, I hope![]()
I'm thinking I'd like to slip it into one of these Dick Ryerson pots too:
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It's fairly close to upright, but the lower trunk does move away a bit, while the apex comes forward again. Your comment is well taken though- it could probably stand to be tilted a bit more forward at the next repot. ThanksIs it leaning back? Otherwise great progression.
I'm trying to get this compact and start ramifying it.
Thanks a ton for posting this, have saved every picture in a 'progression album' (I have many that I like to refer to, all are bougies which are my fave plant right now! I collect larger yamadoris and I root lots of large hard-wood cuttings)
Thank you!Thanks a ton for posting this, have saved every picture . . .
. . . Lastly, great tree!! Love it!!!
No, it doesn't "need" to flower. I've removed all of the bracts/buds whenever I think of it for the last couple of years . . . I do the same thing with pomegranates in development at the nursery - no sense letting them flower or fruit.. . . stopping the flowering cycle - have you been doing that for a while? I'd love to know I could just cut-off the flower-bracts at the petiole and be done with it - is this bad for it over time, does it 'need' to flower?
Nothing wonky with the dates, I just had the tree for a couple of years before I started this thread. I bought it at a landscape nursery in 2014, worked it all through 2015, and then started this thread in early 2016 by posting a serious of photos from the previous years' work. The most recent photo I posted was taken this June, so around three years now from buying it as raw landscape nursery stock.Second Q is how long you've had this, the date at the top of the thread says 2016 but on the first page you refer to 2015 so I suspect something's wonky with the dates - how long was the time between the first and last (nursery-bought, and latest bonsai) pics?
Thank you!
No, it doesn't "need" to flower. I've removed all of the bracts/buds whenever I think of it for the last couple of years . . . I do the same thing with pomegranates in development at the nursery - no sense letting them flower or fruit.
Nothing wonky with the dates, I just had the tree for a couple of years before I started this thread. I bought it at a landscape nursery in 2014, worked it all through 2015, and then started this thread in early 2016 by posting a serious of photos from the previous years' work. The most recent photo I posted was taken this June, so around three years now from buying it as raw landscape nursery stock.
I don't think this is a useful analogy. I'm not aware of any horticultural reason that they must flower (though I'm open to evidence). Besides, I have a neutered dog, and he's greatI wasn't sure if repeatedly depriving it of flowering could be bad in the long-run somehow (hormonally or something, I mean it's basically being neutered over and over!)
Whatever you do, don't do that, hahah! You'd have to start with dramatically increasing your alcohol consumptionI'd certainly just copy what you do, like specific details would be great do you like to try to prune or pinch when you do it, do you do anything else at that time etc etc?
I reckon I have just enough warm weather left for one more round, so here we go . . .
Not intentionallyDid you stress it for the late season Bracts as well?
Haha good stuff, thanksI don't think this is a useful analogy. I'm not aware of any horticultural reason that they must flower (though I'm open to evidence). Besides, I have a neutered dog, and he's great
Whatever you do, don't do that, hahah! You'd have to start with dramatically increasing your alcohol consumptionSeriously though, I'm just sharing my experience with my plants in my (Southern California) climate. I'm NOT obsessive about optimizing this - every so often, I walk by the tree, see that it's flowering, make a mental note, and then cut all the flowers off when I get around to it. Sometimes that's right away, and sometimes it's not - contrary to appearances, I have a real non-bonsai life too!
Absolutely!! I've spent almost a year doing mostly bougainvilleas, have quite the collection of them now lol and have gotten to the point I feel I'm getting decent at them, problem with that is they're so damn different from other species that a good amount of what I've learned as far as how a tree handles insults just won't apply to other trees (for instance, yesterday I found the first buds on my 'club', a ~1' tall x 5" wide piece of thick-barked bougie trunk, I put the bottom 20% in a container of perlite, it's the most ridiculous 'truncheon' type cutting you've ever seen, the things bougies can do are incredible!!)I encourage you to experiment with your trees in your climate and see what works for you/them.
Very appreciated! I've got a folder "Progression Series" that I keep albums in of stuff like this, thanks for updating it I love to see how raw material develops into bonsai over time!!I just realized I have this tree here at the nursery with me, so while I'm back at this thread, I might as well update it. Here's the growth since the last post in June (edit: I may have actually done one small round of cutbacks between then and now) . . .