MACH5
Imperial Masterpiece
Hello BNuts! Just like my trees, I am slowly coming out of my winter slumber and reengaging by starting to work again on my bonsai. I've been mostly away from this forum and have hardly contributed at all in the past couple of months but it was a nice break.
I thought I'd post this shohin Japanese maple in the kabudachi style. I acquired it a couple of years ago from a member of a club I used to belong to. I fell in love with this little tree even though it was in really bad condition when it was offered to me. Last spring it came out of its winter dormancy in very weak condition and I lost several small branches including the loss of the top third of the main trunk! I am almost certain this tree had contracted the bacterial disease Pseudomonas syringae which looks a lot like the deadly verticillium wilt except if treated in time the tree can be saved. I did a couple of chemical drenches in spring of 2013 with a product called ZeroTol. Slowly through the growing season the tree improved and started to gain real strength and vigor by mid summer. There are still some weak areas but hopefully they will improve this year. I do not plan on touching the roots at all this year.
Shown below is the tree as it appears today. It is roughly 5.5" tall from soil level not counting the long shoots at the top. I did a bit of wiring on it including the two strong shoots coming out of the main trunk. I plan on letting these grow more this year to thicken them up and help increase the overall metabolism of the tree. Contrary to bonsai rules, I decided here to leave the two shoots as future apexes on the main tree since given that this is a clump, I think it can work well within the overall design. After they develop further they will be cut back to form part of the clump's general silhouette.
One of the main problems with the current design is that trunk #4 is partially hidden. The two options to fix this would be to rotate the tree clockwise to allow this trunk to be seen from the front or wire it and bend it towards the right a bit. I'm not favoring the idea of rotating it since I do loose width on the nebari. So probably next year I will tackle this issue by carefully and gradually bending the trunk to the side.
Below are a few more detail pics. As you can see the bark is getting an aged appearance with a nice spreading nebari.
I have to take care that these strong new shoots do not sap the strength from the rest of the tree. I am concerned that even if we perceive them as individual trunks, the tree will treat them as "lower" branches that will eventually weaken as the tree forces itself upwards. This I will have to manage carefully.
I thought I'd post this shohin Japanese maple in the kabudachi style. I acquired it a couple of years ago from a member of a club I used to belong to. I fell in love with this little tree even though it was in really bad condition when it was offered to me. Last spring it came out of its winter dormancy in very weak condition and I lost several small branches including the loss of the top third of the main trunk! I am almost certain this tree had contracted the bacterial disease Pseudomonas syringae which looks a lot like the deadly verticillium wilt except if treated in time the tree can be saved. I did a couple of chemical drenches in spring of 2013 with a product called ZeroTol. Slowly through the growing season the tree improved and started to gain real strength and vigor by mid summer. There are still some weak areas but hopefully they will improve this year. I do not plan on touching the roots at all this year.
Shown below is the tree as it appears today. It is roughly 5.5" tall from soil level not counting the long shoots at the top. I did a bit of wiring on it including the two strong shoots coming out of the main trunk. I plan on letting these grow more this year to thicken them up and help increase the overall metabolism of the tree. Contrary to bonsai rules, I decided here to leave the two shoots as future apexes on the main tree since given that this is a clump, I think it can work well within the overall design. After they develop further they will be cut back to form part of the clump's general silhouette.
One of the main problems with the current design is that trunk #4 is partially hidden. The two options to fix this would be to rotate the tree clockwise to allow this trunk to be seen from the front or wire it and bend it towards the right a bit. I'm not favoring the idea of rotating it since I do loose width on the nebari. So probably next year I will tackle this issue by carefully and gradually bending the trunk to the side.
Below are a few more detail pics. As you can see the bark is getting an aged appearance with a nice spreading nebari.
I have to take care that these strong new shoots do not sap the strength from the rest of the tree. I am concerned that even if we perceive them as individual trunks, the tree will treat them as "lower" branches that will eventually weaken as the tree forces itself upwards. This I will have to manage carefully.