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- leatherback
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welcome to 名媛直播Empire!
J.
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- Youri1995
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- manofthetrees
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just a precaution on the acer air layer... alot of acer species require roots to be grafted onto the airlayer for them to be successful.they will produce roots without grafting,but often die after being cut,that is why there are so many grafted acer nursery trees. it is not terribly difficult to do if you have roots availible so do some reaserch before you kill some branches
i found this out the hard way
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- LRC1979
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- leatherback
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manofthetrees wrote: alot of acer species require roots to be grafted onto the airlayer for them to be successful.they will produce roots without grafting,but often die after being cut,that is why there are so many grafted acer nursery trees.
I personally have *never* heard of anybody grafting roots to an airlayer...
That being said: Several of the Japanese maple varieties have poor roots. Which is indeed why most cultivars have a graft. The rootstock is the 'wild' wild Acer Palmatum, grown as a seedling, and the scion, or named variety, is grafted on top of this. No airlayering involved.
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- manofthetrees
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- sikadelic
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I am 27, originally from Southwest VA, and currently live in S.C. I am a married father of two boys and Active Duty Army. I am new to bonsai and will be trying my hand at air layering a local Holly species, buying nursery stock, and planting Chinese Elm this year. I look forward to seeing the progression of my trees and eventually having real works of art in several years.
Through my reading here I see there are a lot of genuinely knowledgeable and friendly people here. Thanks for your patience when dealing with green newbies like me. Happy Spring and I look forward to your updates!
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- manofthetrees
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- Youri1995
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- mikebonsai
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I'm from Norway and as for that I don't know which trees will be able to survive here due to our harsh winters and shitty summers, but I'll gather knowledge and experiment with seedlings, nursery stock and yamadori. I've ordered some training pots, a turn table, some wires and I'll get around to ordering a tool kit, just got to do it without my better half noticing (she says she'll order shoes for the same amount if I do, haha!)
I ordered Japanese Maple, Chinese Elm, Scots Pine seeds etc, so I'll see what I'm able to keep alive with my lacking horticultural skills. Going to gather some yamadori material when the snow melts, gonna be fun.
Cheers, nice meeting you all.
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