I have a jade plant that I would like to convert to a bonsai tree, I am torn between two styles, informal upright, or twin trunk. The plant does not seem to respond well when I prune younger green parts. I will need your guy's help with deciding on what to do as far as styling goes. I am even open to just letting it grow for now, if that is what it takes for the plant to be successful. Before I posted this I was intending for the plant to be informal upright, but now I'm not sure of my decision. We have freezing winters where I live and the plant stays outside during the late spring and through most of summer.
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Welcome to the forum!
Sorry for the lack of responses. People are very helpful around here. You're not getting any traction on this thread because crussala are not generally considered "bonsai". Ovata in particular has huge plump leaves that never really look much like a tree. Some will use portalacaria afra and claim "bonsai". They have smaller leaves and are very similar to crussala so can be a little more "tree like" sometimes.
Crussala and portulacaria are both succulents...they do not have wood like trees. Their trunks and branches are water storage organs and don't grow in rings like trees do. They are closer to cacti.
That said, they can make very nice specimen plants and are trivially easy to care for. There are a number of enthusiasts on this site and they do get talked about from time to time so you can search and learn a ton...
I've had "one" for over 30 years now. It's more than one...but they all came from the original 4" pot my then fiance/now wife gifted me...my very first plant that started a much larger obsession
Here is the main plant
It's a little wilty from neglect. I haven't switched to growth watering with it yet and it's mad at me. When they are inside for the winter, I rarely water them. Maybe once a month. Really only when the leaves are thin and wilty like this.
In growth I water pretty often...over water by most peoples standards!
Here is a single trunk I'm growing separately.
This might give you a better idea of what they look like with some age. Even with thick trunks, there's no nebari to speak of. And the foliage is too coarse to "style'.
They need a lot of growth to get this thick...but they don't heal scars. You end up with this
Which can be hidden...but don't expect bonsai techniques to yield bonsai results.
My advice? Grow yours and enjoy it for what it is

Style it to make you happy...they really can make nice specimen plants! But don't expect a ton of "bonsai" feedback...they just don't fit the "bonsai" mold very well...