Yup, you sure did.My Alberta spruce in the right lol!! I may have done a lot wrong
Yeah, I should have done more research and read more prior to! I was able to save a lot of the branches I trapped. The plan is to let the tree grow now and I will be trying this again.Yup, you sure did.
Welcome to the club! You're in the right place
Any wire that wraps multiple branches is a no-no. Seems like you can save some time and effort because you think you want those little branches to point up, but all your angles will be wrong, and the wire won't be as effective at shaping the branches.
On those thick branches, if wrapping with wire won't hold it, try guy wires.
Nice cotoneaster!Three bargain bin trees. Both Hinokis seemed to not tolerate this winter very well. Maybe they got a little dry not sure.
Really hoping the 5 trunk survives though.
Also a bargain bin cotoneaster.
Oh, and add a general location to your profile.My Alberta spruce in the right lol!! I may have done a lot wrong
Jumping in with both feet, having my eyes, ears, and mind, all open to this amazing art of bonsai. After watching videos of others creating bonsai, and maintaining them, I have decided to expand my gardening skills. I have a small collection of red maple, and silver maple seedlings/saplings that I am beginning to experiment with. I have also bravely (maybe stupidly?) dove into an existing plant in the garden of the home that I am renting. The juniper had been neglected for years before I moved in a year ago. Here are some photos of what has happened so far in my new adventure.
View attachment 315842View attachment 315839View attachment 315839View attachment 315840View attachment 315841Edit to add this before and after set of the juniper that I have trimmed back. Still needs shaping, and I think some wire:bending may help as well. There also remains an issue of crossing branches, that I am hesitant to correct. Any and all advice is welcomed. Thanks for taking a look !View attachment 315845View attachment 315846(KZ)
Update October 2023,Jumping in with both feet, having my eyes, ears, and mind, all open to this amazing art of bonsai. After watching videos of others creating bonsai, and maintaining them, I have decided to expand my gardening skills. I have a small collection of red maple, and silver maple seedlings/saplings that I am beginning to experiment with. I have also bravely (maybe stupidly?) dove into an existing plant in the garden of the home that I am renting. The juniper had been neglected for years before I moved in a year ago. Here are some photos of what has happened so far in my new adventure.
View attachment 315842View attachment 315839View attachment 315839View attachment 315840View attachment 315841Edit to add this before and after set of the juniper that I have trimmed back. Still needs shaping, and I think some wire:bending may help as well. There also remains an issue of crossing branches, that I am hesitant to correct. Any and all advice is welcomed. Thanks for taking a look !View attachment 315845View attachment 315846(KZ)
There are some folks here that have managed some pretty cool stuff with scheflera, though the trees tend to have to be on the larger side to keep those big compound leaves in scale. Actually, that's a thing with compound leaves in general.Well this is my first post on this site.
I am an absolute newbie. I picked up a "Bonsai Starter Kit" with a mini-jade (portulacaria afra), and I have been growing it over the past year. It is still quite small and I haven't begun training it yet.
I enjoy caring for it so much, that this week I picked up a ~5 year old Hawaiian Umbrella (schefflera arboricola) that is much bigger than my mini-jade.
I am attaching a few photos, and care or training tips would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
Many thanks for these tips.There are some folks here that have managed some pretty cool stuff with scheflera, though the trees tend to have to be on the larger side to keep those big compound leaves in scale. Actually, that's a thing with compound leaves in general.
Let it grow a bit, and while you're looking for that moment that where you see what the tree wants to do you can research the heck out of it.
Portulacaria (aka mini jade, dwarf jade, elephant plant; but no relation what so ever to actual jade plants) can be lots of fun. They're not even actually a tree, but a succulent, closer to cactus than trees. Most of the same principles apply though.
Start looking for ways to turn any branching that goes 3 or more ways into only 2 ways. This is a general rule in bonsai. This way you won't get big bulbous nodes, known as reverse taper. Somewhat counter intuitively, you generally want to get rid of the thicker branches. This helps develop a smooth taper from the wider base of the trunk out to the tips of the branches, making the tree look more aged and mature.
You better!Many thanks for these tips.
I am sure that I will be back here with more questions before too long.