Cajunrider
Imperial Masterpiece
I had a chance to discuss tree collection with a guy who did that for a living. He and his crew used to collect hundreds of deciduous trees at a time for bonsai. I asked him what are the critical steps for collecting tropical trees and the ones below is what he told me.
1. Keep the tree in the shade, cover with tarp or towels or straws.
2. If possible put cut paste or wood glue on major root cuts.
3. Don't be impatient and pot the trees. Wait until major root cuts are dried before potting. This can take 1 to 14 days.
4. Pot the tree in 50/50 rice hulls and coco husk and keep it covered and in the shade. Water sparingly to just avoid having the mix bone dry. Prevent water loss but don't try to get the tree to soak in any water.
5. Slowly introduce the tree to sunlight after it has budded.
I'm guilty of being impatient a lot of time. He told me a lot of people plant trees before the root cuts dry out and close the water flow. Once potted those roots often rot and kill the trees.
Now you guys tell me if this guy is doing it wrong. He was collecting trees in the tropics so things may be different than here in the US. He told me he has collected tens of thousands of trees either in the wild or in root stock farms. Some were for bonsai, some were citrus, carambola, tamarind, ochna, mango root stock that they later graft on more desirable cultivars.
1. Keep the tree in the shade, cover with tarp or towels or straws.
2. If possible put cut paste or wood glue on major root cuts.
3. Don't be impatient and pot the trees. Wait until major root cuts are dried before potting. This can take 1 to 14 days.
4. Pot the tree in 50/50 rice hulls and coco husk and keep it covered and in the shade. Water sparingly to just avoid having the mix bone dry. Prevent water loss but don't try to get the tree to soak in any water.
5. Slowly introduce the tree to sunlight after it has budded.
I'm guilty of being impatient a lot of time. He told me a lot of people plant trees before the root cuts dry out and close the water flow. Once potted those roots often rot and kill the trees.
Now you guys tell me if this guy is doing it wrong. He was collecting trees in the tropics so things may be different than here in the US. He told me he has collected tens of thousands of trees either in the wild or in root stock farms. Some were for bonsai, some were citrus, carambola, tamarind, ochna, mango root stock that they later graft on more desirable cultivars.