Hi Blue
I have some further thoughts that may be of help...
I have seen two main types of Nandina Domestica in my area – one is the ‘standard’ size known as ‘Sacred bamboo’ which stands about 2 m tall and is typically tall and leggy with a clumping growth pattern. Leaf structure is wide, delicate and kind of wispy. It has very distinct red berries that form in the top of the plant during the fruiting season. It is used as a hedge and screening plant and brings a lovely ‘Asian’ feel to a garden – I love it!
0276.jpg
nandina45-lg.png
The second is a dwarf version N. Domestica ‘Nana’ and one variety I’ve seen is called ‘Gulf Stream’ but I’m sure there are more out there. This plant is only about 50cm – 1m tall and has a much more compact leaf structure and typically looks like a clump of red & green leaves, rather than seeing distinct trunks in the standard variety. It is the ‘go to’ plant for many industrial gardens, accent to hedging plants, petrol stations and landscapes that need hardy and low water tolerant plants. It can look very scraggy and I don’t think all that attractive in this form …. IMHO.
I have seen a number of standard sized ND grown as bonsai and have included a few here. They typically have been in the more feminine minimalist style, with the focus on the root structure as well as the airy and delicate branch / leaf structure. They don’t need much wiring, as they follow a standard vertical growth pattern and to go away from this would look rather unnatural I think. I’ve seen one in a book that was reported to be hundreds of years old and had the most incredible root movement with just a small number of thin trunks with minimal branching. Really impressive called ‘The Dragon’ I think…
Nandina-Bonsai.png
Heavenly%20Bamboo%20seeds%20Nandina%20Domestica%20seeds.jpg
new_trees_020.jpg
new_trees_021.jpg
I’d have a crack at growing your Nandina – they are certainly hardy and can tolerate a range of conditions. I’d keep the structure compact and take off unnecessary branches to bring definition to the plant. Careful consideration needs to be made over the eventual pot and placement, to bring about a pleasing view and to help the tree tell a story.
Good luck with it!
Stew
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.