As always, you’re doing it right! The temptation is to go for the flowers instead of developing good structure. But, you are willing to sacrifice flowers for a few years to get good structure which means you’ll have a better bonsai in the long run. Well done!Updating a few threads today. Here is the crab pruned and wired. With a little more ramification, it should be good to allow to fruit.
View attachment 280457
What about it suggests to you that it is being stressed?Don't you think that you repot it too often? I think you are stressing it too much and that you would speed up ramification if you gave it a break
On regular crabs (But also full sized apples) I find that the flowering branches will show lots of nodes near eachother (As they do not grow). And the buds are larger than normal. Is that the case here too?The best way to avoid that is to do pruning just after flowering I think.
root pruning
most bonsai growers up to 10 years before they finally acknowledge that their bonsai really do grow faster and better in the year following a repot.
I think you are stressing it too much and that you would speed up ramification if you gave it a break
Your first reply made me wonder if you’ve been growing these for years and saw something I was missing. I do not think this tree is showing any signs of stress at all; your second reply seems to agree. If you have some crabapple bonsai, I’d love to see them.It looks healthy, but that is not what I meant. It doesn't look like it is stressed, but the development is being slowed down a lot, in my opinion.
but now by mid-summer, it requires water twice daily; that is stressful to the tree.
It wilts when dry. That is a sign of stress.Why you figure that is stressful?
I figure it shouldn't be so long as it gets water.
I have been once a day, but recently read (again) about roots growing when dry, which I don't wholly believe anyway, but have thinking about setting up dryer mix and more frequent watering. Which I won't....but...so you know where my mind has been....
Sorce
It wilts when dry. That is a sign of stress.
Sure, as is the case nearly universally. However, if a tree wilts regularly between watering, that is a sign of stress in the plant.Ok. So as long as the water I provided before wilt it's ok?
Sorce
preempt the next argument: yes
but now by mid-summer, it requires water twice daily; that is stressful to the tree.
Looks like you can't stand critics. I am not talking about crabapples. That is my opinion regarding all trees.Your first reply made me wonder if you’ve been growing these for years and saw something I was missing. I do not think this tree is showing any signs of stress at all; your second reply seems to agree. If you have some crabapple bonsai, I’d love to see them.
by mid-summer, it requires water twice daily; that is stressful to the tree.
the first work is getting the roots into an appropriate-sized pot, then selecting the branches, pruning them short, and allowing them to slowly develop; coaxing out some shape with wire.
I am happy with the pot pairing, the trunk movement and taper, and mostly satisfied the primary branch placement; though it will continue to be a work in progress to soften a few of the angular shoots. This result in 3 years, to me, is satisfactory, and I am eager to see it in another 3.
First, I don’t mind critics at all if they add value. You stated an opinion, and then immediately reversed it when I followed up. No value.Looks like you can't stand critics. I am not talking about crabapples. That is my opinion regarding all trees
in 3 years you didn't get any ramification except for the primary branches.
This is just my opinion. Feel free to disagree