dirk hoorelbeke
Omono
I have the same feeling. I tend to forget what I do faster and faster. Nice to follow people who started earlier so I can pick some tricks.
thank you. I was wondering about that a month or so ago but figured it was at least somewhat normal. They did it when i moved them out into the sun.Great post! I wouldn’t worry about the first baby needles dying off because that is normal on Pine seedlings I have seen. They are looking good! Your largest seeding looks to have a branch started on the left. Mine don’t come out of the fridge until the end of the month.
Those first needles are the pine seedling’s cotyledon needles and only temporary just like the cotyledon false leaves on others.thank you. I was wondering about that a month or so ago but figured it was at least somewhat normal. They did it when i moved them out into the sun.
You are doing a great job of tracking your project and posing all the right questions. As i read through your posts it occurs to me that you could consider more fertiliser if you wish. Not required but will enhance the results. I just spent the last three days pruning developing five year pines to prevent faults in development and encourage desired results. Reflecting on your question whether to plant more seeds? I planted approximately 150 per year for six years in a row. Space is now a consideration, along with soil, containers, water etc. Time is also a critical factor particularly because i am after quality not quantity. It takes quite a bit of time to wire, unwire, repot and care for developing trees properly. The key factors are time, space and resources. This year i expect to spend approximately 1 hour per tree in development. The time will increase with changes from development to refinement over the next five to ten years. 4 inch containers have changed to grow beds, then grow boxes and space for light and air roughly 4 sq ft per tree. Been there doing that. Next up dealing with the Tridents, and assorted Japanese Maples 200 plus, then Zelkova, Persimmon,Japanese Pepper,Korean Hornbeam, Japanese Red Pine. I think passionate Bonsai practitioners might require a twelve step program.Its official batch 3 of my seedlings are ready for seedling cuttings. Planted out on 17MAR. A little over 5 weeks from start to being able to take cuttings.
I have not made up my mind if im going to start more yet. Out of all 150 + seedling cuttings ive started, only 1 has died so far. I have roughly 30 or so that are almost in full sun (8am till about 3pm) and will be moved to more sun in a few weeks.
I am going to let these keep growing till I make my mind up. I might end up taking a few of the most vigorous and only trimming the tap root a little and potting up into containers. We will see. I have a ton of other rooted cuttings to deal with soon and make soil for.
I would suggest moving them outside, the air movement and extra sunlight is beneficial.This is an awesome thread. Great progression. I just took about 6 of mine and root pruned them. I have them in my downstairs enclosure next to a window. Its humid as all hell in there. All the doors and windows are open. Do you think they will be ok there or do they need bright shade outside? I still have about 50 more to do but they aren't ready yet.
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I would suggest moving them outside, the air movement and extra sunlight is beneficial.
JBP do well in the sun, not so well in shade! I gather from your comments that your sun and or heat is extreme at this point! Or you are wishing to adapt them slowly from inside to outside? I moved my seedlings out to full sun all day within 14 weeks. I am in a full sun southern exposure temperatures range 70-90 F during the day in my location. Florida location i am not familiar with what are your temperatures like this time of year?But they cant get direct sunlight? THe only other place I can put them is under my deck where they will get about 4 hours of sun in the morning, is that too much?