I've played around with my delguptas a little more and have some observations to add for anyone who cares.
NOTE: I do not have a thread on these trees and don't really consider how I'm growing them "bonsai". I don't believe they are good "bonsai" material. But, they are fun plants
And people do have a lot of interest in them...so here are my observations.
This is only the 3rd summer for my trees. I had 2 in 5 gallon grow bags. One I'm continuing to let grow out. The other I shoved in a tiny pot to see if it would live
The "rainbow" effect is due to oxidation in the bark layer. They shed their bark as they grow. When they shed in strips and patches, different levels of oxidation occur...and you get different colors. But, in young trees growing vigorously, the entire bark layer can pop off all at once
That's what happened to one of mine this year.
The freshly exposed new bark is bright green and then changes color through reds and blues and purples. These 2 pictures are the same tree taken about a month apart.
The new bark is reddening up noticeably now. But, since it mostly all popped off at once, no fun patchiness
Well, mostly...I did find a spot where some bark had remained but was separated and ready to peel off. So I pulled it!
The bright green patch near the lower center is freshly exposed. The pinkish bark was freshly exposed about a month ago and has now "weathered".
If you can get the bark to peel in patches, you can start to get the "rainbow" effect...even at a young age.
I can see how on a thicker tree the bark would pop and peel in patches and strips to create the interesting coloration. But the bark is much less likely to peel in strips on younger trees. It seems that even leaving the bark "popped" but "attached" protects the new bark from some oxidation. Next year, if the bark pops all at once, I'm going to try ripping bits off while leaving as much on as I can still on the tree. I don't know how much that will help with creating a "rainbow" since it seems to be months to get into the blues...but, like I said...fun trees to play with
Here is my bigger tree today.
I'll continue to let that one grow out. There's an air layer in it's future sometime though...there's an ugly bar branch I need to take off.
I used to have dozens of these...they grow very well from seed and $5 of seed is about 10million seeds they are so tiny! I still have way too much seed left over! They also air layer really well...at least when young. Since they are so easy to get back, I downsized to just 2 plants over the past winter.
The second one I kept, I kept to shove in a tiny pot to see if it would live.
These guys do NOT do well when they wilt! There is a point beyond which old leaves will not recover. Wilted branches rarely ever return to full upright. Many of the sags in the branches of my trees were from wilting events
I tend to overwater my plants...they don't always wilt due to lack of available water. It seems heat and wind can pull moisture out of the leaves faster than the roots can provide it sometimes.
This tree started a little smaller than the other one. I reduced the roots heavily to get it into this pot. I chopped the top heavily to compensate. I lost about half the foliage that I kept. The tree wilted within hours of being repotted. It wilted so bad that I moved the pot into a bucket of water for a few days. That helped...but it still wilted during mid day if it got too warm. The tree has since recovered and I'm not as worried it's going to die now. There are even signs of new growth!
My trees are pretty ugly
They'll never be "bonsai". But they are quite entertaining to grow!