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semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 1st, 2010, 2:43 pm
by Jamie
hi guys
recently i swapped dumper for a juniper (he got a peach) and i received it on thursday, i was quite excited when i opened the box and it had a massive amount of branches and foliage
so i got a pot i wanted for it thinking i will make it into a more upright tree, as i was working it i decided to go with a semi cascade
this is it in the pot i thought it would go in and before any work.
Junisembef1.jpg
that angle also made the trunk look like it has reverse taper but the trunk is actually oval in shape, i beleive there is a couple of live veins there doing this and will expose them later when the tree has recovered.
and here is the tree in its pot more suited to the style
Junsemi 8hr.jpg
from here there will be some more refinement of the padding and the shari
let me know what ya all reckon
Jamie

Re: semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 1st, 2010, 3:05 pm
by kcpoole
can you tilt it to the right more?
Put the apex above the trunk and this will tilt the trunk to the right so it leans toward the tail
Ken
Re: semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 1st, 2010, 3:34 pm
by Jake
turned out pretty good mate, big difference
Re: semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 1st, 2010, 7:28 pm
by Jamie
kcpoole wrote:can you tilt it to the right more?
Put the apex above the trunk and this will tilt the trunk to the right so it leans toward the tail
Ken
Gday mate
yea i was actually looking at that myself, i have wired it in but should be able to let it go enough to get more tilt

nauticadlay wrote:turned out pretty good mate, big difference
thanks mate

Re: semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 1st, 2010, 7:36 pm
by Jarrod
Looks good Jamie, hope it acclimatisers it's self well.
Cheers
Re: semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 1st, 2010, 7:43 pm
by Jamie
It has a pretty strong feeder root system so I beleive it shall be fine. will update next time

Re: semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 3rd, 2010, 12:12 pm
by blkrota
Looks cool, I like it.

Re: semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 6th, 2010, 6:35 pm
by Jamie
just a little update,
I defined the foliage a little more, and tilted the angle as much as i can for now, i will be able to change it at the next repot, it had some really good fiberous feeder roots so i dont think it will be a long period before i can repot, probably next year sometime, for now no more work on it, maybe a little more definition in the pads which needs 1mm wire that i have run out of already, it was the wire from the lot leigh got me, its amazing how much of the stuff you can go through in a short time! (allong with the 1mm, my 4.5mm is all used now too, and the 3mm has about a third left).
'
semi juni.jpg
Jamie

Re: semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 7th, 2010, 8:27 am
by Jake
even better jamie, its looks great bro!
Re: semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 7th, 2010, 1:20 pm
by nealweb
G'day Jamie, looks good, nice tree but if it were mine I would think about cutting off (or back hard) everything on the left hand side of the trunk so that the apex is about directly above the lip of the pot and the cascade just flows away to the right. To me it looks a little awkward/off balance with the trunk and cascade going right but so much bulk of growth to the left and the apex left aswell. Just a thought anyway.
All the best...
neal.
Edit - I just noticed the melaleuca of pup's in the ausbonsai banner, you could probably get something roughly along those lines from it

Re: semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 7th, 2010, 1:37 pm
by Jamie
thanks guys
Hi Neal, i know what you are saying and there is some method to my madness

as this tree was sent up to me from melb. what i have done is kept as much as i can so it recovers nicely, over time i will thin it out, get more angle on it and refine the padding, wanting the tree to have a fuller canopy with defined pads to make it look more natural.
cheers

Re: semi cascade juniper
Posted: August 7th, 2010, 1:41 pm
by nealweb
Jamie wrote:thanks guys
Hi Neal, i know what you are saying and there is some method to my madness

as this tree was sent up to me from melb. what i have done is kept as much as i can so it recovers nicely, over time i will thin it out, get more angle on it and refine the padding, wanting the tree to have a fuller canopy with defined pads to make it look more natural.
cheers

Ah very wise too, always ensure the health of the tree first, then go on to styling. Sounds like a goos plan
have fun...