Camellia japonica 2016
- Daz
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Hi All,
Greetings from Johannesburg, South Africa & new to the site and relatively new to bonsai. :woohoo:
I acquired this Camellia japonica from the local garden center and i am undecided on what i want to do.
I have styled the tree to where i think i can start to work on it as spring is about 2 weeks away and my bonsai are beginning to bud.
I have no experience with Camellia and would like help or suggestions on what i should do? does and dont`s with this species.
I always appreciate constructive advise.
Thanks all
Greetings from Johannesburg, South Africa & new to the site and relatively new to bonsai. :woohoo:
I acquired this Camellia japonica from the local garden center and i am undecided on what i want to do.
I have styled the tree to where i think i can start to work on it as spring is about 2 weeks away and my bonsai are beginning to bud.
I have no experience with Camellia and would like help or suggestions on what i should do? does and dont`s with this species.
I always appreciate constructive advise.
Thanks all
by Daz
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- Auk
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Daz wrote: I have styled the tree to where i think i can start to work on it
Is it just me or...? I really do not understand the above line.
by Auk
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- Daz
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In other words, i have cut the Camellia back to where i think, i can begin to develop the tree. Make sense? or ill rephrase it.....
So should i leave it as is? or cut more back or trunk chop it?
So should i leave it as is? or cut more back or trunk chop it?
Last Edit:8 years 4 months ago
by Daz
Last edit: 8 years 4 months ago by Daz.
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- Auk
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Not really. You have already cut it, pruned it, repotted it, so you are not beginning to develop, you already started.Daz wrote: i have cut the Camellia back to where i think, i can begin to develop the tree. Make sense?
It would have been a good idea to ask questions before you started.
Seems you have done a lot in a short time. Leave the plant alone now, let it recover first.
by Auk
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- augustine
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Leave it be and see if it comes back. Camellia is an evergreen and should not be pruned like a deciduous tree (specifically removing most of the foliage.)
by augustine
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- Drakes
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I agree with Auk and augustine. Let it grow freely for 1/2 years. Here in Italy camellias grow slow, if they behave the same where you live i think you'll need some years to have a good branch structure. Good luck!
by Drakes
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