tamakwe
Seedling
- Messages
- 5
- Reaction score
- 7
I started bonsai when I was a kid about 15 years ago and had a lot of great mentors. Within a few years, my entire collection was made of of mature trees I had collected in the Northeast from the wild. Most of the men in my family were hunters and a couple were foresters, so I knew a lot of great, remote collecting spots for Larch, Pitch Pine, White Cedar, and more. A friend and I went on a dozens of collecting trips over the years, and I learned how to remove, transplant and care for each species with only a few casualties. Eventually, I had to give up my entire collection when I moved after college because I couldn't take my bonsai with me. We auctioned off the trees at a club benefit, and they all went to good homes.
I'm in Southern California for grad school now, and it looks like I might be stationed here for few years after. I want to start bonsai again. Naturally, I want to work with collected material, but I'm a little wary. I've been scoping out locales for California Junipers using a lot of the same tricks I used in the Northeast, and I've found some awesome trees with permission to dig, but I have no experience with this species. I'm used to collecting in bogs and lake shores, not deserts, and I won't be as skilled at determining what can be removed and how likely each tree would be to survive. I plan to hit up my local club soon, but what are the best resources out there to learn? I want to make sure I really know what I'm doing before I walk in there with a shovel. The pics below are a few trees I tagged to give you a sense of what I'm looking at.
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I'm in Southern California for grad school now, and it looks like I might be stationed here for few years after. I want to start bonsai again. Naturally, I want to work with collected material, but I'm a little wary. I've been scoping out locales for California Junipers using a lot of the same tricks I used in the Northeast, and I've found some awesome trees with permission to dig, but I have no experience with this species. I'm used to collecting in bogs and lake shores, not deserts, and I won't be as skilled at determining what can be removed and how likely each tree would be to survive. I plan to hit up my local club soon, but what are the best resources out there to learn? I want to make sure I really know what I'm doing before I walk in there with a shovel. The pics below are a few trees I tagged to give you a sense of what I'm looking at.



