Fuji Cherry – Expressions of Grace Bonsai https://www.expressionsofgracebonsai.co.uk With age comes beauty and charm Fri, 26 Jan 2024 13:00:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 https://www.expressionsofgracebonsai.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/little-logo-75x75.png Fuji Cherry – Expressions of Grace Bonsai https://www.expressionsofgracebonsai.co.uk 32 32 Bonsai in Bloom – Spring Catwalk Display https://www.expressionsofgracebonsai.co.uk/bonsai-in-bloom-spring-catwalk-display/ https://www.expressionsofgracebonsai.co.uk/bonsai-in-bloom-spring-catwalk-display/#comments Fri, 11 Mar 2022 11:43:49 +0000 https://www.expressionsofgracebonsai.co.uk/?p=2741

"Baby Ficus Bonsai is banned from all future competitions after admitting the use of performance enhancing wire."

Despite this shocking revelation there are still some exceptional bonsai gracing today’s catwalk displays.  Allow yourself 9 minutes to relax and enjoy the spring show.  The fashion is dazzling and opens with three Dwarf Azalea sisters at the peak of their abilities. They are followed by twin Fuji Cherry models – each survivors of near catastrophic separations at birth!

A couple of aging elite bonsai models then take the applause by showing off their curves – well done Lucinda Larch.  With the crowds in raptures, sudden and unexpected complaints are received from the Forsythia camp, when she notices that the youngest entrant – a baby Ficus – is clearly using performance enhancing 1mm wire. An instant lifetime ban follows with further threats that fertiliser will be tested…

Thankfully, the bonsai display is saved by the late entry of Zita the Chinese Elm and her cousin, Twin-Trunk Maple – surely stars of the future?

Several other complaints have been lodged after enquiries suggest some ‘insider trading’ has unfairly advantaged many of the bonsai dress choices. The designer of the costumes – Dawn Isaac ( of deiCeramics), has been unavailable for comment. More information on this uncertain situation may be found on her website: deiceramics.co.uk

It is also worth noting that this is the first competition allowing both disability and LGBTQ+ bonsai to compete on an equal rooting. Definitely a step forward for diversity :()

I hope you enjoyed this light hearted approach to showing my bonsai in bloom.  Regular informative videos are being uploaded to YouTube so please subscribe and keep on watching…

Happy Bonsaiing

Xav

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Cuttings and general bonsai upkeep https://www.expressionsofgracebonsai.co.uk/cuttings-and-general-bonsai-upkeep/ https://www.expressionsofgracebonsai.co.uk/cuttings-and-general-bonsai-upkeep/#respond Fri, 06 Aug 2021 13:25:56 +0000 https://www.expressionsofgracebonsai.co.uk/?p=2577

If you are anything like me then you will really struggle to throw anything away.  Every year, since I started in bonsai, I have spent as much time taking cuttings as I have in developing the trees.  This was not a deliberate choice on my part – just a natural desire to use all of that discarded material.  When I first began, I had no idea that there were techniques used for successful propagation.  I just took an offcut and planted it into some garden soil.  Any size and any time of the year that I was pruning…

Why is my stick alive?

Surprisingly, I had a reasonable amount of success during the early years so it never occurred to me that I was just lucky.   I still have an eight-year-old Corkbark Elm that started off as a broken branch discarded into a compost pile. 

I later learnt that Chinese Elm are particularly easy to propagate from cuttings – which did explain the success.

The branch that lived!

I take my cuttings twice a year.  First, is sometime in late May / early June when the spring flush of growth has extended and hardened off.  This also coincides with my pruning cycles and the increased temperatures / daylight hours.  Ideally, we would want nightime temperatures to be above 15 °C to aid root development. 

The second occasion occurs late July when I carry out my general pruning to maintain bonsai shape.  I have most success placing the cuttings into damp perlite or vermiculite.  They are then kept in a propagator or covered with an upended plastic bottle.  I keep them misted but do not water.  They are normally kept in a shaded part of the garden to reduce transpiration. 

The best results come with: Fuji Cherry, Trident Maple, Chinese Elm and Boxwood.  With indoor varieties I find that Ficus and Jade root very easily and all I need to be careful of is not to overwater them as they succumb to root rot quickly.

With Fuji Cherry I take a cutting from the point where the stem has changed colour and hardened enough to be self supporting.  I remove the growing tip and around 3/4 of the leaves.  I use a general purpose rooting hormone and then place the cutting into the soil medium.

I have used a range of potting mediums with success.  The real issue is to ensure you establish a humidity bubble to stop the stem drying out.  Don’t worry if the leaves fall off – shoots may still appear 4 -6 weeks later.

Dawn Redwood was a surprise success for me and though I only take 3 or 4 a year it is great seeing them develop.  I tend to concentrate on last years unwanted growth as it gives me a thick stem.  I use either perlite or sphagnum moss and then cover them to preserve humidity.  

It is worth remembering that after a couple of years you should consider loosely wiring the main trunk to produce the movement you desire.  Once the trunk thickens too much you have no hope of bending them!

Trident Maple are treated exactly the same and you can take up to a pencil thickness cutting.  With the thicker cuttings I use sphagnum moss as the potting medium as I find this helps the hardened wood stay hydrated whilst the roots form.  I normally leave two or three leaves on the shoots and remove the growing tip.  I always cut at the base of an internode section.

I will take up to two dozen cuttings for each washing up bowl I use – success is up to 80% for me normally.  In Year 1 I will thin out any obvious weaklings and then split them in year 2 to individual pots.

Japanese Larch are the hardest cuttings from my experience.  I have tried a variety of times and methods and can boast the grand total of 3 successes in as many years!  But at least that is three more than I had before – at no cost 🙂

Satsuki Azalea are best taken as heel cuttings.  This is when you gently peel the shoot away from the trunk or branch.  My success with these is also mixed and I have found the cuttings that have taken are extremely slow to develop.  But again, they are free…

Like the Trident Maple, you can take very thick cuttings off of a Chinese Elm.  They often propagate successfully without need of humidity covers and this time of the year I am planting all of my prunings into washing up bowls.

This spring I removed a large straight branch from one of my bigger Elms.  I removed all of the bark on the lower side and wired it into some soil to attempt a variation of the ground layer technique.  I definitely have new growth so time will tell…

I have found that so long as you apply the general principles to your propagation success will follow.  It may be discouraging in the first year because they are still not bonsai but watching them send out new shoots is definitely rewarding.  It doesn’t matter how many failures you have because the ones that do take will be your future bonsai masterpieces. 

I definitely recommend you scouring You Tube for content on ‘how to take’ cuttings – there are loads of videos available.  The only cautionary thing to remember is that we each live in different areas and it can be surprising just how varied results can be within our own ‘micro’ climates.

If you are ever confused at whether your cutting is viable it is worth taking a closer look at the rare but popular ‘dead tip’ variety.  This is a sure give away that your propagation failed!  Oh…and don’t be confused by the little green weed – that will never make a bonsai.

It is now the time to carry out 2nd pruning on your Japanese Larch but more on that in the next post.

Happy bonsaiing 🙂

The rare 'Dead Tip' cutting
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