Quote:
Originally Posted by Miri the Wildmage
I am doing something a bit weird here. I am growing my very first bonsai from scratch. My aunt is a horticulturalist who grows bonsai in her garden and in RHS greenhouses, and I'm hoping she'll help. I am taking pine seeds and freezing them for a few weeks, then soaking and planting them. anybody got some tips?
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After getting a huge no of bonsais stolen one night my interest has waned, so I've not tried the following ...
I read a fab article on growing pine from seed for bonsai in a magazine by one of the Japanese masters a decade or more ago. The supporting photos were awesome. You can get great results within a few years. the technique was counter intuitive to traditional approaches.
Mix - very free draining, a coarse sand was used.
Pot type - plastic colander to air-prune the root tips, this encourages multiple roots rather than one single tap root. As the trainee plants got bigger simply potted up into a larger collander without removing the old one.
Fertalizing was heavy, with frequent feeds of liquid fert.
Pruning - The apex was taken out very young to encourage masses of laterals from ground level, increasing trunk taper.
Wireing - heavy to cut into the very short trunk and establish spiraling of the vascular tissues, removed only after scarring was developing.
After about 3 years one of the low laterals was trained to become the lead/ new trunk.
Sounds radical, so maybe try this with only some of the seedlings and treat the others conventionally.