Tyler is great!Tyler Sherrard came to Plant City Bonsai in North Ga last fall, he was great.
Tyler is great!Tyler Sherrard came to Plant City Bonsai in North Ga last fall, he was great.
Not at all.
But, if you need to tighten the wires after the fact, a trick is to grab the wire running under the pot with a pair of pliers, and giving it a twist. That should tighten it up.
Going back to the time of the original potting, I tie my trees in so that they do not move at all. I could grab the trunk of the tree, and pick up the whole thing, and it not wiggle. (Don’t do that!)
Maybe your tie-down wire isn’t thick enough?Thank you Adair. I do that too, both twisting underneath when loose and tying down securely, but I was hoping you knew a trick against the loosening. Apparently you are doing the trick already as yours do not loosen. Now lets see if I can find that out too. Thank you![]()
Here’s how I and a lot of others secure a tree to its pot. They don’t, and should never move by the time they’re tied in.Thank you Adair. I do that too, both twisting underneath when loose and tying down securely, but I was hoping you knew a trick against the loosening. Apparently you are doing the trick already as yours do not loosen. Now lets see if I can find that out too. Thank you![]()
That’s the way I do it too. Makes a cage around rootball. And no wires showing.Here’s how I and a lot of others secure a tree to its pot. They don’t, and should never move by the time they’re tied in.
https://nebaribonsai.wordpress.com/2016/02/27/preparing-a-pot-draft/
Pull 1 to 2, twist it tight with pliers, pull 2 to 3, twist it tight, 3 to 4, and 4 to 5 behind the trunk.
When you repot next, cut the wires under the pot at the holes, unpot the tree, and find one wire. Cut it, grab an end with pliers, and pull straight out while turning the root ball. The whole remaining assembly comes out in one piece.
View attachment 222046View attachment 222047
That’s the way I do it too. Makes a cage around rootball. And no wires showing.
Maarten, could it be that you put too much substrate below the roots, which move around? Or the rootball is not very strong?I do that too, both twisting underneath when loose and tying down securely, but I was hoping you knew a trick against the loosening. Apparently you are doing the trick already as yours do not loosen
Maybe your tie-down wire isn’t thick enough?
Here’s how I and a lot of others secure a tree to its pot. They don’t, and should never move by the time they’re tied in.
https://nebaribonsai.wordpress.com/2016/02/27/preparing-a-pot-draft/
Pull 1 to 2, twist it tight with pliers, pull 2 to 3, twist it tight, 3 to 4, and 4 to 5 behind the trunk.
When you repot next, cut the wires under the pot at the holes, unpot the tree, and find one wire. Cut it, grab an end with pliers, and pull straight out while turning the root ball. The whole remaining assembly comes out in one piece.
View attachment 222046View attachment 222047
Maarten, could it be that you put too much substrate below the roots, which move around? Or the rootball is not very strong?
Thanks, @garywood taught me this method a long time ago.Brian your blog actually has been a huge help in doing tying down right. That 5th wire is smart and the whole assembly coming out with just one pull is pretty cool too!
Thank you![]()