Bonsai Orange County
Mame
I follow your Instagram account and really enjoy looking at your trees
Glad you enjoy the trees and thanks for the follow!I follow your Instagram account and really enjoy looking at your trees
Love itUpdate on this tree. You can see how much it has pushed up since it was repotted in February!
I gave it a pretty conservative trim today as it is about to flower, so I‘ll wait for that to finish before doing a proper prune and wire most likely.
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Thanks for the reply, it certainly is a prolific grower.It's crazy how much roots this tree develops in 1 year! Great progression, looking at the 2022 photos above, I think that your alternate front displays a better tree, but the actual front has a better nebari. Would a slight 3-5 degree rotation clockwise to the actual front make the tree look better?
@Maiden69 I'm not 100% certain, I haven't bothered to measure it for a while but I would estimate it at about 30cm (just under 12") from top of pot to apex and maybe just under 6cm (2.25") for trunk width at the base. Just an estimate though. I think the main (only?) drawback with the "alternate" front is it doesn't have as good a spread at the base from that angle.@Ryceman3 I don't know if it is posted, I looked and couldn't find it... what's the actual size of the tree?
Yeah, this is a pretty interesting species of Melaleuca. I have 2 others and they are all the same in that no really heavy roots seem to develop like generally happens with most trees, and that we would use in the creation of nebari. That's not the case with other Melaleuca I have though, just this kind (Melaleuca ericifolia). If you look back at the "root pad" image from the repot before this one you can see that the roots are all generally fine even up close to the trunk. Maybe next repot I might focus on paring back roots around the base from the top just to see if anything is there at all ... in any case the actual trunk continues to thicken at a decent rate, even in a small pot so I'm quite OK with it just sorting itself out right now. Thanks for the response, I appreciate it!A truly awesome growth sequence!
Do not forget your nebari. It is the beginning, and at least traditionally, the most important part of any bonsai. You want to see a nice flare at the base of the trunk with radiating surface roots that give the tree its sense of stability and age. In every photo all I see is a trunkline that goes telephone pole straight down into the ground. The nebari may already be there, but just covered by the soil.