[A Forest Tale] - SquatJar - Casuarina glauca stand
Posted: January 6th, 2020, 11:05 pm
My first entry is a group of Casuarina Glauca seedlings I germinated from seed collected on my parents cattle farm in the Adelaide hills about a year ago. I aim to replicate the stand of 100+ trees in the back corner of the yard that had continued to grow thicker and thicker. Most of the trees seemed to have sprouted from root suckers and were competing with each other, so all grew very straight and tall.
About 4 or 5 trees were 600-900mm in diameter, maybe they were the pioneers? Most of the others were 20-300mm thick. When huddled inside on a cold wintry day/night the sound of the wind could be heard ripping through the 'needles' (leaves and branchlets). Reminding me of how cold and unbearable it was outside, and how nice it was sitting around the fire with a glass of aged red in hand.
The photo is from May 2019, not much has changed but they are thicker and there is a bit more variation in trunk size already. Likely due to genetics, root run and differing sunlight exposure. I will get an updated photo soon, unfortunately most of the seed that I scattered in the tray has germinated in two straight-ish lines. I will change this a little at the first repotting and I may add in a few others I germinated that are growing on in separate pots.
Adding extra meaning to this planned group is that as of the Adelaide hills fires a few weeks ago, this stand is completely gone, as are about 50% of the big old gum trees on the 160 hectare property. Thankfully the house was one of the few things that didn't burn, quite amazing as the vines growing under the verandah and a few of the pine posts are charred black.
I was lucky enough to collect a few of the larger and more interesting trees from the stand last year. About half are growing well, even ones collected with zero roots which is when I found out they were suckers.
Final thanks to MJL for organising the comp. There's no way I'd be posting my trees on the forum at this early stage of my bonsai life without the encouragement of this and other comps.
About 4 or 5 trees were 600-900mm in diameter, maybe they were the pioneers? Most of the others were 20-300mm thick. When huddled inside on a cold wintry day/night the sound of the wind could be heard ripping through the 'needles' (leaves and branchlets). Reminding me of how cold and unbearable it was outside, and how nice it was sitting around the fire with a glass of aged red in hand.
The photo is from May 2019, not much has changed but they are thicker and there is a bit more variation in trunk size already. Likely due to genetics, root run and differing sunlight exposure. I will get an updated photo soon, unfortunately most of the seed that I scattered in the tray has germinated in two straight-ish lines. I will change this a little at the first repotting and I may add in a few others I germinated that are growing on in separate pots.
Adding extra meaning to this planned group is that as of the Adelaide hills fires a few weeks ago, this stand is completely gone, as are about 50% of the big old gum trees on the 160 hectare property. Thankfully the house was one of the few things that didn't burn, quite amazing as the vines growing under the verandah and a few of the pine posts are charred black.
I was lucky enough to collect a few of the larger and more interesting trees from the stand last year. About half are growing well, even ones collected with zero roots which is when I found out they were suckers.
Final thanks to MJL for organising the comp. There's no way I'd be posting my trees on the forum at this early stage of my bonsai life without the encouragement of this and other comps.