

I have an elm, i believe it may be a chinese, its growing nuts here even with the heat.Magzy wrote:G.day mate, i must say thats a fine looking elm you have. I went to buy a English elm last year and when i asked about one i wanted they said to me if you dont have a cool spot for it dont bother because they really like the cold and it wont survive. This confused me a little because the nursery is a 5 min drive from my place but it is in the valley and im right on the beach where i do get hammered by a lot of wind but other than that it would not be that much cooler from where i am. I am still tempted to go and get one and prove em wrong but paying a fair bit of coin for one and then it dying on me is holding me back, so i guess im asking what type of climate do they like and would it grow well here.
Cheers,Mark
For me putting it into a Bonsai pot was motivation to develop it. I had already worked on the trees roots for a couple of years and the base certainly did not need developing (500mm wide) I have a lot of trees and if i do not put the tree in my face it would have sat for another couple of years. I am a great believer that the trees you want to work on should be placed where you have to walk past them first thing in the morning. This motivates me to think about it. I had to shorten the leader after the limb fell on it and i scored the cambium on both parts of the breakage and pulled them together and then sealed it with wound paste. It is still healing and if becomes a weak link it will have to go and i will start rebuilding the top again.cuwire wrote:
When you get to question answering time can you tell me if the Bonsai pot in the early stage has kept the trunk itself basically the same size and was this the reason for the bonsai pot.
Also with your rebuild have you successfully pulled the split/broken branch back to good health ..... did you use some magic gue ?
Magzy wrote:so i guess im asking what type of climate do they like and would it grow well here.
Glad i could help you out Dario. They are a rewarding tree but very time consuming.Dario wrote:Cheers, and thank you, Dario
How long have you had it HornetHornet wrote: I have an elm, i believe it may be a chinese, its growing nuts here even with the heat
Not long Eliass in the scheme of things, it will pass before you know it.eliass wrote: Have just acquired one, will post photos in 10 years
Thank you Glenda.Glenda wrote:
Hi Dario, no prep work was done for this trunk. It was an eight hour dig (with lots of rest between) and you can be quite brutal to the root system. In an Elm forest all the trees are interconnected rootwise and you literally have to chop through roots to free up the tree you are targeting. My aftercare was over the top, as i built a small glass house for it, and probably not necessary.Dario wrote:Hi Bodhi, when you collect English Elms do you bare root them? And for a beast this size, did you do any prep work a season ahead or did you just grab it in one g
My observation of English Elms have been that they will heal anything on the main trunk before they get to work on the branching and all of the trunk chops on my elms are slow to heal. But if you look at the main trunk where it has had large branches cut they are doing fine. I open the cambium, or pick at it to accelerate the healing. Remember though that the canopy on this tree was crushed which would not have helped my cause.Dario wrote:I am just curious and perhaps it is healing just fine?
I dig, take them home, bare root them, flat bottom them and soak in a mix of seasol and profert for a couple of hours then into a large grow box. Leave for two growing seasons Lightly pruning but not taking off any branching. After that you can treat them the same as any other tree but you must, if possible, repot yearly after that. Cut all the branching back to the first secondary and start branch selection.Dario wrote:Any comments from you regarding collection
To my knowledge, yes. The whole forest i dig at is interconnected via their root systemDario wrote: does that mean that an Elm forest is mostly formed from sucker growth over time?
Thanks Alpine, gotta do my bit on this forum and promote Bonsai for the future. We need experienced young people to give our trees to ,so its our job to motivate them.alpineart wrote: Thanks for posting such an in depth topic and progression .