Anyone know what elm is it?

Thanks, I like bigger leaves anyway for elms. These have very nice colour too.Thymetraveller wrote:I posted almost the same question last year...one of my trunk chops seemed to have gone rogue!
It looks like a chinese elm to me; the lwaves reduce dranatically with the right treatment, but they quickly revert to a much larger size
Hi KB,kb bonsai wrote:I too have had a similar experience, several years ago I purchased half a dozen reasonably advanced ( but badly neglected and pot bound) Chinese elms with the view to use them in a forest setting. At a later date ( and from a different nursery) I purchased 3 smaller Chinese Elms to supplement the group with. Within a short period of time I noticed vastly different growth characteristics between the two lots. The first group, the leaves where larger and the ramification was quite sparse. The second 3 however the leaves were significantly smaller , had a very fine margin of white around the leaf edge and the branch ramification was far finer and twiggier. I am sure however that they were both "Chinese elms" but the habit was so different that I was unable to use them in the same forest setting. I certainly cannot explain it, perhaps there is someone out there who can shed some light on this , other than just "one of the mysteries of nature !!!"
Regards
KB