hinmo24t
Masterpiece
i have a handful of trees ive put together to bonsai in future, letting them all grow naturally this summer
and through the winter (i know which ones to bring inside, basement, or garage i have, and some south facing windows which i have for morning light/first half of day) with plans on working a lot of these in the next spring (could be a lot of work, 10ish trees)
potted ones i was planning on repotting to work the roots, and make hardcuts in the spring (acer, dogwood, naval orange, bougainvillea, hibiscus, etc.)
a lot of these were bought as mid size nursery stock, and letting them grow now)
if they do well this summer and through the winter, then show some form of life come late winter/early spring, is it okay to get these root pruned and in smaller bonsai pots, as well as hardcut them all, in the boston 7b late march/april?? turning them into sticks with few leaves/buds only?
OR should they only be repotted/root work and minor pruning to keep them a bit under control only?
then, i have (3) buried-inground field maples (3" diameter up to 2.5' tall, regrowing strongly now, i hardcut in the springtime, and a lilac clump growing nicely now, and (3) 1" thick 1' tall field maples (sugar or norway) responding well to hardcuts as well. should all these be potted in the fall, or once again in the spring, and can those deal with hardcuts as well as the root work and repot? those last two smaller field maple i must admit i hardcut and put them in different ground spot early spring, and they have shown good new growth the last month after a 2 month delay. the larger in grounds have been where they were 15' tall earlier in spring.
trying to nail down whether it is always just one or the other, roots/repot or hardcuts in the spring or fall...
they threw me off with my $40 bougainvillea in a 10' pot the other day, said it was just repotted recently or in the spring and put a little rootbag within the 10" pot. i was told to leave that be until next spring. i havent seen the root bags like it before but figure it decomposes or the new roots just work right through it.
sorry for the novel!
-Tom
and through the winter (i know which ones to bring inside, basement, or garage i have, and some south facing windows which i have for morning light/first half of day) with plans on working a lot of these in the next spring (could be a lot of work, 10ish trees)
potted ones i was planning on repotting to work the roots, and make hardcuts in the spring (acer, dogwood, naval orange, bougainvillea, hibiscus, etc.)
a lot of these were bought as mid size nursery stock, and letting them grow now)
if they do well this summer and through the winter, then show some form of life come late winter/early spring, is it okay to get these root pruned and in smaller bonsai pots, as well as hardcut them all, in the boston 7b late march/april?? turning them into sticks with few leaves/buds only?
OR should they only be repotted/root work and minor pruning to keep them a bit under control only?
then, i have (3) buried-inground field maples (3" diameter up to 2.5' tall, regrowing strongly now, i hardcut in the springtime, and a lilac clump growing nicely now, and (3) 1" thick 1' tall field maples (sugar or norway) responding well to hardcuts as well. should all these be potted in the fall, or once again in the spring, and can those deal with hardcuts as well as the root work and repot? those last two smaller field maple i must admit i hardcut and put them in different ground spot early spring, and they have shown good new growth the last month after a 2 month delay. the larger in grounds have been where they were 15' tall earlier in spring.
trying to nail down whether it is always just one or the other, roots/repot or hardcuts in the spring or fall...
they threw me off with my $40 bougainvillea in a 10' pot the other day, said it was just repotted recently or in the spring and put a little rootbag within the 10" pot. i was told to leave that be until next spring. i havent seen the root bags like it before but figure it decomposes or the new roots just work right through it.
sorry for the novel!
-Tom