Mallsai- sargent juniper
- Craig
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of what goes on with a tree bought from a retail outlet.
This Juniper is called a 12 inch 名媛直播 and cost 120 aus dollars. It is healthy and to a newer person to 名媛直播 probably looks amazing. Something like this can be a good start and once at home should just be cared for and kept alive.
Once a person generally gets the hang of watering,caring for the tree and including allowing new growth then it can be worked on and begin transforming it into something more 名媛直播 like.
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Once you have been doing 名媛直播 for a while you will begin to understand the proceedures which will move a
tree like this forward in the direction of a 名媛直播 tree.
this is how I went about beginning this Mallsai junipers journey,
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some foliage removal
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and some bark removal
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the planting angle will probably be altered to the right
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- Craig
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the tree is recovering very well and in fact I have given it a repot into some bonsai medium
Hopefully this give some inspiration to newer bonsai artists and older alike,
take care,
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- leatherback
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I would never refer to this as a mallsai though. This is just a generic juniper, as obtained from larger gardenstores for use in the garden. Mallsai is really a specific mass-produced 'bonsai interpretation', in my view.
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- Craig
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A tree as you describe would be a pre-trained tree or 名媛直播 stock from 名媛直播 Nursery only and not mallsai. You would never find pre-trained trees sold as 名媛直播 in a chain store here.
thanks for comment.
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- leatherback
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This is sold in Europe as bonsai, and is what we here would refer to as mallsai:
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- Auk
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leatherback wrote: I would never refer to this as a mallsai though. This is just a generic juniper, as obtained from larger gardenstores for use in the garden. Mallsai is really a specific mass-produced 'bonsai interpretation', in my view.
I agree. Usually I write 'that's not bonsai', but in this case I would add 'but that's not mallsai either'.
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- bob
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- Auk
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Looking at the Shari, I wonder if it could survive that ?
In the are I marked there seems to be no connecting tissue - or is that because of the shadows on / quality of the photo ?
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- bob
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This is what I see, however not clearly. So if there is no connecting tissue, there may be a problem there as Auk says.
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- Auk
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bob wrote: This is what I see
It's the shadow of the trunk on the wall. I've removed it, and now I see that what I saw is not a part of the trunk that is stripped, but actually that shadow.
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Still, it seems pretty risky. I've understood junipers have a linear sap flow - the root under a branch feeds that branch - so cutting through it interrupts the sap flow to that branch and may kill it.
The shari I have made on my juniper all are under branches I removed or jinned. As the parts of the trunk that feed other branches get thicker, it 's a bit easier to see where the live veins are.
[edit]Noticed I have to correct something:
A root under a branch feeds the branch above it: that's not completely true. What I mean is that that root has a path to a branch - not necessarily straight up to that branch[/edit]
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