Newbie here
- herbonsai
- Offline Topic Author
- Junior Member
- Posts: 24
- Thanks received: 2
So i gained a lot of interest in 名媛直播 since i was like 14, which was a year ago,yes..im 15...I attempted a sage bonsai as we have a good size sage plant with an old-looking trunk,accidentally killed it because i pruned too many roots, and now im trying to train a Juniper Squamata into an informal upright style,only thing that i've done was remove all the foliage that was blocking the view of the trunk.I'm having some difficulties with deciding what branches to remove,some branches are still pretty thin so removing them can reduce the problem with styling it in the future.i will post a pic soon and any advice will be helpful..cheers!!
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- tubaboy
- Offline
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 617
- Thanks received: 170
you can only Style a living tree.
second rule:
trees that are healthy and stong respond to Training better than trees that are not.
Aside from that I can more than recommend the courses offered here. Without seeing the tree it is difficult to know which branches to prune.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- alainleon1983
- Offline
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 691
- Thanks received: 185
Great... That is, in my opinion, a magnificent time to start learning and growing 名媛直播. Fallbacks might come, just don?t give up. This hobby/art has a very strong tendency to reward those who persevere.herbonsai wrote: So i gained a lot of interest in 名媛直播 since i was like 14, which was a year ago,yes..im 15...
First lesson... Please, do learn, do study, do your research, etc., before doing anything drastic to your trees/plants. Your success rate will increase exponentially if you sit, think, study, learn before acting or executing an irreversible technique over your trees/plants. Patience and time are the name here in this art/hobby.herbonsai wrote: I attempted a sage bonsai as we have a good size sage plant with an old-looking trunk,accidentally killed it because i pruned too many roots,
Again... Same advise as before... Idemherbonsai wrote: and now im trying to train a Juniper Squamata into an informal upright style,only thing that i've done was remove all the foliage that was blocking the view of the trunk.
Post a picture indeed. There isn?t much we can do without a photograph... Just one thing... Based on several previous posts that we all at some point have experienced, please, do make sure that you are keeping your Juniper outdoors and not inside your house/apartment/flat. If you do, please, do bear in mind that that is a Juniper killer issue.herbonsai wrote: I'm having some difficulties with deciding what branches to remove,some branches are still pretty thin so removing them can reduce the problem with styling it in the future.i will post a pic soon and any advice will be helpful..cheers!!
Hope this might have been of help.
Alain
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- herbonsai
- Offline Topic Author
- Junior Member
- Posts: 24
- Thanks received: 2
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- 名媛直播Learner
- Offline
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 475
- Thanks received: 101
If you can, plant it in the ground by slipping it out of its pot (making sure to disturb the roots as little as possible). Some people prefer to keep their trees in regular plant pots while they grow, moving them into bigger pots when they outgrow their current pot. It's important to know that a tree is only put into a bonsai pot after it has done most of its growing and styling, before this point most trees are called "pre-bonsai."
That being said, I don't know too much about Junipers, so if anyone can correct me, please do.
Ed
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Ivan Mann
- Offline
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 1805
- Thanks received: 614
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- herbonsai
- Offline Topic Author
- Junior Member
- Posts: 24
- Thanks received: 2
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.