I bought Mr Twister from an fellow old country man trying to make a living. Don’t quite know what to do with Mr Twister yet. It appears he has just been freed from a rebar.
My current plan is to repot and develop the nebari first before working on the top.
Bear in mind I know nothing about ficus. BUT! i think this article presents a strong option. (note that i'm not calling this tree a mallsai! it's just a somewhat similar shape)
The Chinese elm shohin in this display was air-layered from a mallsai. This post shows the progression of the transformation. Mallsai is a term coined in the US; it refers to mass produced bonsai s…
It much depends on whether you like trunk as is or not. If you love the tree, do as you see fit. MY opinion.......and only my opinion--- Air layer 2 trees off of it and keep the lower, big trunk for your prized tree. I think you'll eventually have 3 really nice trees instead of one. Much longer to finished products in my scenario, though.
My unsolicited advice is keep the weird! Up-pot and pot-in-pot for escape roots and then let sacrifice branches from several places. Also pack the trunk with sphagnum moss in plastic and get a ton of aerial roots to intertwine in, out and around the trunk. An eventual styling might make it look like smaller trees clinging to the side of a weird mountain.
Bear in mind I know nothing about ficus. BUT! i think this article presents a strong option. (note that i'm not calling this tree a mallsai! it's just a somewhat similar shape)
The Chinese elm shohin in this display was air-layered from a mallsai. This post shows the progression of the transformation. Mallsai is a term coined in the US; it refers to mass produced bonsai s…
This one is really not a lazy S mallsai. It is a traditional super tight coil often done in SE Asia. As the tree matures the coils collapse in on one another forming a twisting trunk. Trunk taper is done by tightly controlling the growth up top and sacrifice branches down low. It is rather a slow process.