Dipping my toe into natives
Posted: October 31st, 2019, 6:56 pm
Let me preface this with ' i have no idea what i'm doing'.
When i got into bonsai, it was via the seasonal beauty of the deciduous trees of Kyoto and Arashiyama in full autumnal glory i had visited on a holiday. I never really had much time for natives, even though my father is as mental for them as i am for maples. I used the excuse of having heard second hand of them being difficult and temperamental to bonsai culture to avoid them.
In the back of my mind though i have thought about the possibilities they may offer; potential for recreations of native heathland or Euc/ Angophora forests. While working i have taken to listening to podcasts, and specifically Bonsai Mirai podcasts. During the week i listened to the recap of his visit to the AABC convention and what he experienced with the natives there. It came away from that somewhat ashamed of myself for maligning natives on purely anecdotal stories, and decided to remedy that.
I dropped by the local nurseries and came away with a couple of young plants to try. Leptospermum petersonii for $6, and a clumped cultivar Callistemon I've never heard of called kenmorrisonii Betka Beauty for $9.95. I wasn't about to invest heavily despite my piqued interest. Upon hearing about this new direction, my father was more excited about bonsai than i have seen him since i started, and laid his hands on 21 tube stock Allocasuarina paradoxa for me to play around with and see how they fare in bonsai culture.
I have no idea how successful any of these will be, i'm stepping out of my comfort zone of knowledge and experience here and just going by horticultural principles, but i feel it is time for me to have my own source of experiences rather than just repeat what others have said without my own basis to work from.
I have potted both already into wider but shallower pots, taken about 20% off the roots and uncovered quite a nice flare to the trunk on the lepto. The She-oaks are tiny young things, so i'll just tease the roots a bit on the weekend and get them into either a seed tray or one of my deeper bonsai pots for the moment
Anyway, here's to learning by personal experience not just by second hand anecdotes. Having said that, i'll gladly listen to advice!
Lepto
Callistemon
She-oaks
When i got into bonsai, it was via the seasonal beauty of the deciduous trees of Kyoto and Arashiyama in full autumnal glory i had visited on a holiday. I never really had much time for natives, even though my father is as mental for them as i am for maples. I used the excuse of having heard second hand of them being difficult and temperamental to bonsai culture to avoid them.
In the back of my mind though i have thought about the possibilities they may offer; potential for recreations of native heathland or Euc/ Angophora forests. While working i have taken to listening to podcasts, and specifically Bonsai Mirai podcasts. During the week i listened to the recap of his visit to the AABC convention and what he experienced with the natives there. It came away from that somewhat ashamed of myself for maligning natives on purely anecdotal stories, and decided to remedy that.
I dropped by the local nurseries and came away with a couple of young plants to try. Leptospermum petersonii for $6, and a clumped cultivar Callistemon I've never heard of called kenmorrisonii Betka Beauty for $9.95. I wasn't about to invest heavily despite my piqued interest. Upon hearing about this new direction, my father was more excited about bonsai than i have seen him since i started, and laid his hands on 21 tube stock Allocasuarina paradoxa for me to play around with and see how they fare in bonsai culture.
I have no idea how successful any of these will be, i'm stepping out of my comfort zone of knowledge and experience here and just going by horticultural principles, but i feel it is time for me to have my own source of experiences rather than just repeat what others have said without my own basis to work from.
I have potted both already into wider but shallower pots, taken about 20% off the roots and uncovered quite a nice flare to the trunk on the lepto. The She-oaks are tiny young things, so i'll just tease the roots a bit on the weekend and get them into either a seed tray or one of my deeper bonsai pots for the moment
Anyway, here's to learning by personal experience not just by second hand anecdotes. Having said that, i'll gladly listen to advice!
Lepto
Callistemon
She-oaks