Privet/Ligustrum, Indian Privet/Clerodendron
Posted: January 12th, 2009, 10:06 am
Why in the hell apologise for working with privet. It is WONDERFUL material. Easy to grow, responsive, small leaves. And let it flower.... unless there is an asthmatic in the house. Privet flowers are beautiful and they don't come too far off the foliage. The smell isn't roses but don't get that close. When and only when the flowers brown... then cut 'em off. In the wild privet is hell but under our intense cultivation it makes a super bonsai and is great material for beginners because it is so willing and hardy. It is good material for beginners to collect as it is hardy.
And while on the subject of privet, don't overlook Clerodendron [commonly called Indian Privet]. You can get it at nurseries [I'm talking Sydney] and stock plants usually look revolting. But it is a FAST developer, FAST thickener, FAST grower. Keeping it under wraps is far harder than keeping it going. In the ground the shoots produce large slender oval leaves widely spaced. In a pot the shrinkage is incredible and the leaves become far smaller and are produced in tight profusion. AND it flowers... flowers on old wood from the crotch of branchlets... so pruning off buds when pruning long shoots [as in crabapple] doesn't happen. The flowers are white and tiny, perfectly suited to shohin. I would be loathe to try mame due to its virulent growth habits. I got a tree from hideous to benchable in less than 15 months but the problem is keeping it in shape for an exhibition. But you can learn a great deal with the species. Branches can be removed and new ones will develop rapidly. It shoots from old wood, it shoots from everywhere [well, almost everywhere... trying for a back branch on one tree and the bloody beast is being recalcitrant]. The bark is heavily textured and creamy. This is a great tree.
LONG LIVE PRIVET in its many manifestations.
With the Clerodendron, I have found that the plants I have purchased in the past two years, 3 of them, had all been seriously underwatered. It took each tree about three to four months to recover and not a great deal happened. The trees were SOOOO ugly. Really ugly. Then growth started, I did a bit of shaping, a bit more growth and the bonsai in each started to emerge quickly. Then it becomes exciting...
And while on the subject of privet, don't overlook Clerodendron [commonly called Indian Privet]. You can get it at nurseries [I'm talking Sydney] and stock plants usually look revolting. But it is a FAST developer, FAST thickener, FAST grower. Keeping it under wraps is far harder than keeping it going. In the ground the shoots produce large slender oval leaves widely spaced. In a pot the shrinkage is incredible and the leaves become far smaller and are produced in tight profusion. AND it flowers... flowers on old wood from the crotch of branchlets... so pruning off buds when pruning long shoots [as in crabapple] doesn't happen. The flowers are white and tiny, perfectly suited to shohin. I would be loathe to try mame due to its virulent growth habits. I got a tree from hideous to benchable in less than 15 months but the problem is keeping it in shape for an exhibition. But you can learn a great deal with the species. Branches can be removed and new ones will develop rapidly. It shoots from old wood, it shoots from everywhere [well, almost everywhere... trying for a back branch on one tree and the bloody beast is being recalcitrant]. The bark is heavily textured and creamy. This is a great tree.
LONG LIVE PRIVET in its many manifestations.
With the Clerodendron, I have found that the plants I have purchased in the past two years, 3 of them, had all been seriously underwatered. It took each tree about three to four months to recover and not a great deal happened. The trees were SOOOO ugly. Really ugly. Then growth started, I did a bit of shaping, a bit more growth and the bonsai in each started to emerge quickly. Then it becomes exciting...