Thursday, March 26, 2020

Mats: Bougainvillea - 21J

Planted in a pot since time immemorial as per owner when he said, "My granny used to water that when I was still a kid". There used to be a "bunga" at its left side, now dead, and served as fertilizer for the tree.

My first thought was to make it an imperial/garden bonsai (1.2 meters above, correct me if I'm wrong, please) but it seems that 5 years will not be enough to have a proportionate secondary branches. The girth of this tree is 12 inches in diameter! I can fit it in my garden but will take at least 3 sqm which I do not want to spare for just one tree.

This tree did not come free, yet VERY CHEAP, and big thanks to my eldest sister for this gift.

Please check the captions per photo for further details. 

A palm tree used to be where the arrow is at. 
It's a big W. 

The chair is 1.1 mtrs tall, definitely this is an imperial bonsai, but the branches are too long and I don't want to wait 5 years for the soon-to-grow secondaries to grow big before styling it as bonsai.
Option 1. Tilt the tree to the right. 1st/right branch is thick, back/2nd branch is a given. 3rd/left branch is missing. There however is a branch behind where the red arrow points, where I can get a left branch.
That branch where the yellow arrow points kinda made me think. 1-2-3 sequence says CUT, but imagining a rather artistic approach if kept made me take a 2nd look.

Option 2. Slant the tree to the left and grow a branch where the apex will be taken from. It shall be faster than growing a thick left branch but then again, how long?
I used cow poop. 
Plus vermi-compost, worms included and more to be added.
So it's obvious, I went for the 1st option. The left branch shall be taken somewhere behind the trunk if none grows from the left. Just the basic 1-2-3 for this tree, hopefully I turn it into a beautiful bonsai someday. Estimated finished height is between 100-115cms.

No pot is available yet no problem for drainage. The tree behind it shall provide the shade and after 6-8 months, it can be transplanted to a better training pot. I measured 80x60x25cms for its final pot. I did not put anything under the cow poop, the Earth is my drainage.

And oh, those are cuttings. Some were already planted a day before where the tree was taken as a "Thank you, forget me not" token to the owner. I shall give him a bonsai out of these cuttings a year from now.

Cn: 21 Jewel, 21J, featherduster, popcorn, pink pixie bougie
Sn: Bougainvillea (glabra? spectabilis?)

#MangyanBonsai 
#hagodniDandoy 
#21j

Sunday, March 8, 2020

Mats: Guava

    June 13, 2019, this tree was uprooted and planted using only pebbles. I had to leave the province to go back to work so I used whatever was available. 5 months ago when I came back I added cow dung on top of the pot to somehow add nutrients as the tree does not show improvements as expected though the roots came out already in search of better medium. 

   Fast forward to today, when I had the chance to remove almost half of the pebbles and I am not surprised to see that hair roots grew upwards to where the dung is and only the bigger ones were left below. Solution? Replace the removed pebbles with compost and vermicast and more dung.

   Note: about 3 inches of pebbles are still intact as bedding at the bottom of the pot.

     Please read the captions for more details.

Hunted June 13,2019 before the rainy season began Trunk is about 6 inches in diameter. This eventually was decided to be the back side of the tree.
Cow/carabao dung added on top of the pot around September 2019.
Pebbles used as potting medium.
This type of medium is NOT RECOMMENDED as it barely retains water, has very little to zero nutrients and is considered good only for beddings inside the pot. Would be better if mixed with riversand, compost, or vermicast. There is no pumice where it's at.
Root hairs grew in the manure because it has more nutrients. Bigger roots grew to about a foot outwards through the drain hole in search of better food supply.

Cn: Guava, Bayabas
Sn: Psidium guajava


Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Bonsai Learning: Marcotting


Neglected air-layered/marcotted material for almost 8 months. See how the roots got stunted where the tie was creating deformed base (left image). Rocks were inserted inside to keep the wide base as the roots grow and thicken. Materials are now planted on top of a broken tile to force the roots to grow outward.

Note:
The marcotted branch is almost 2 years old. The mother plant came from another marcotted branch about 1cm thick.

Tip:
- Choose the branches near a secondary branch to marcot so that you'll be assured of a thick 1st branch
- Powder puff grows fast and if you let the pot sit on top of the soil, roots will be growing outwards in a couple of months only
- There are 2 types of Powder puff. 1 has leaves similar to a tamarind (Tamarindus indica) and the other looks like a kamatchile (Pithecellobium dulce). The one featured is the 1st type.


Common name: Powder puff (red)
Scientific name: Calliandra schultzei

#MangyanBonsai
#hagodniDandoy
#araltayo

Mats: Creeping juniper

A gift from a new friend and enthusiast.

Next workshop is set after 1 year when new branches are expected to have grown longer to fill-up the void.

Cn: Creeping juniper
Sn: Juniperus procumbens nana

Before: 



After: 



#MangyanBonsai 
#hagodniDandoy

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Bonsai Learning: Yamadori

What is yamadori? 

(1) Yamadori is a term used by the Japanese to describe trees collected from the wild. (From http://www.nibonsai.co.uk) 

(2) One of many ways to begin creating bonsai tree. (From https://www.bonsaimary.com)

Let's all learn about yamadori, but please pardon the drawing. 

The yamadori material is a curved hotdog but is not ideal for cascade, and only either formal upright, informal upright, or slanting styles are the most feasible. The trunk however lacks the taper that is ideal for a bonsai. How then, will we be able to make something out of it?

Read on.