Hi Guys,
I recently picked up a JM bonsai stock plant (pics below). With my other plants I generally have an idea of where I want to take it and can visualise an end product. I'm quite stumped with this one though and would really appreciate any advice on the best way to proceed (with styling).
Thanks
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Japanese Maple - Styling advice
Japanese Maple - Styling advice
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Re: Japanese Maple - Styling advice
This tree is so young. You can create almost anything from where it is now. If it was mine I'd probably just allow it to grow for a while to see what it develops into.
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- kcpoole
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Re: Japanese Maple - Styling advice
chop the straing uppper section of trunk back to the branch you have wired and let that branch become the new leader.
Grow, repeat to generate taper and movement
Ken
Grow, repeat to generate taper and movement
Ken
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Visit a Bonsai nursery to see some real nice trees http://www.ausbonsai.com.au/wiki/index. ... _Nurseries
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Re: Japanese Maple - Styling advice
If you can get hold of Peter Adams book Bonsai with Japanese Maples, that will help you greatly.
Roger
Roger
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Re: Japanese Maple - Styling advice
Thats about it. Slow processkcpoole wrote:chop the straing uppper section of trunk back to the branch you have wired and let that branch become the new leader.
Grow, repeat to generate taper and movement
Ken

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Re: Japanese Maple - Styling advice
If you think the tree has achieved the trunk girth you want the start the chop chop suggested but if you want the trunk to be thicker, suggest growing the tree out. Let loose its natural growth until it reaches the thickness or near. Then get into chopping and developing taper and branches. 

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- thoglette
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Re: Japanese Maple - Styling advice
Which is a distillation of what is in the excellentAkhi wrote:If you think the tree has achieved the trunk girth you want the start the chop chop suggested but if you want the trunk to be thicker, suggest growing the tree out.
Find it and read it -your library system may have a copy.RogerW wrote:Peter Adams book Bonsai with Japanese Maples,
I'll also add that "over this side" there's a bit of a revolution happening: people are leaving their Japanese maples out in the sun in all weather, with protection only on the hottest, windiest afternoons. The flip side is that the roots are being left alone, at least while we're growing trunks.
It's still a bit experimental but the growth rates are much better than molly-coddling them.
