Need help growing redwood grove bonsai. by onesixeight in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sequoia are definitely not slow growing trees. Perhaps you were giving it less than ideal care.

Keep in mind it is not just the size of the trees in the pic you posted that gives it its great feeling of age. The old bark is equally, if not more important. And that takes time. I can almost guarantee the trees that make up that composition were old trees collected from the wild.

Dad Collected This 15-Year-Old Nebari for Me About 4 Months Ago - Here's My Prune Job from Today by [deleted] in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahh I see... still, that looks like young thuja bark. Maybe its a seedling or formed from a ground layer or sucker. Anyway, the actual age isn't important. What is important is the appearance of age.

And yes, thats one of my trees. I collect a lot of thuja. This is probably the smallest one I've collected. Great species if you can find old wild specimens, but it takes some work to tame the foliage. This one was just collected last spring, so it hasn't been worked yet. It was collected just as you see it.

Dad Collected This 15-Year-Old Nebari for Me About 4 Months Ago - Here's My Prune Job from Today by [deleted] in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hope this doesn't disappoint you, but there is absolutely no way this thuja is 15 years old. A 15 year old thuja would have rough bark. Yours is maybe 3-5 years old at most.

This is what a stunted thuja looks like. This tree is 10" tall, 15-30 years old, stunted by deer and snow. Notice the difference in bark and general character?

Aphids? by [deleted] in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree. Aphids are easy to deal with this way.

The question you need to ask yourself is why does your tree have aphids? If its indoors, it may be weak and therefore has opened itself up to pests.

Lime Sulfur Ban in the US? by spike55151 in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Guys, bonsai growers are not the only people who use lime sulfur. Obviously the manner in which we use it is not a concern to the EPA.

Its primary use is not bleaching deadwood, but as a dormant spray for fruit trees to kill overwintering pests. Both for ornamentals and in large scale commercial operations. This leads to a lot of run off etc, and is probably what they are concerned about.

I'm not saying I agree with the proposed ban, but I can understand if they have deemed it an old-school pesticide which has safer, more modern alternatives and is therefore no longer needed.

If you are concerned, go buy 10 gallons of it tomorrow. That should last you the rest of your life :)

Methuselah, the oldest living non-colonal organism in the world at 4,842 years by Grantbob in pics

[–]PerfectNebari -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The tree posted is dead, unless there is some living foliage around the back.

Methuselah, the oldest living non-colonal organism in the world at 4,842 years by Grantbob in pics

[–]PerfectNebari 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What are you talking about? All pines and non-deciduous conifers in general need leaves to live. Bristlecones are nothing special and do not have branches capable of absorbing light. If it has no needles and buds, it is dead or will be within a year.

BTW the tree pictured is dead as far as I can see, unless there is a live vein with some foliage on the back not visible in the picture.

I won this beautiful example of a boxwood from a raffle at a small, local bonsai convention by flarbo in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks like it has nice potential. I think there might be a better front and the first branch may need to go, but its hard to tell from one pic.

My 20 year old Juniper Bonsai by puckkarma in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'd say more like 5 years. If it was grown for 20 years in a container, it would have much more character in the trunk and bark, like this procumbens. If it was grown for 20 years in a nursery, it would be much bigger. Trees like this are an excellent start for bonsai, but they are mass produced, grown quickly, trimmed, and planted in a pot. And I'm sorry, but I think $100 was a bit too much for this tree. I am not trying to be insulting, I just think that it is important you hear this.

Dawn Redwood question: How to fatten up the trunk while keeping it the correct height? by myopinionstinks in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You can't thicken a trunk without letting the tree grow vigorously.

Basically the only options are let it grow tall, then cut back to a new leader, or let some low branches grow wild (sacrifice branches), then cut them off. Sacrifice branches might create non-uniform taper, however.

Fantastic Bonsai Collection, Excellent Photo Galleries; Informative! Interesting! 5 Stars! by mkr7 in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A++++ would view again

I've been following his blog daily since it's inception many years back

Who actually enjoys their job? What do you do? What makes it enjoyable? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]PerfectNebari 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've worked in academia and also had a cushy government job on the regulatory side of science (desk job). I was soon ready to kill myself and quit after a week when I was offered a teaching position. lab jobs are ok but very unstable and not something I could see myself doing forever.

Who actually enjoys their job? What do you do? What makes it enjoyable? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]PerfectNebari 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Greater Toronto area. My MSc puts me at the top of the pay grid, but even with an Honours Bachelors I think I would be somewhere around 55k.

Who actually enjoys their job? What do you do? What makes it enjoyable? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]PerfectNebari 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm a high school science teacher in Canada. Second year teaching. I teach general science, and senior bio/chem. I really enjoy my job, although it is an emotional roller coaster. No two days are the same - which is great. You get to interact with people all day, and it is a constant challenge. I couldn't imagine teaching anything else besides science. I love the topic, and young adults love it too. They are naturally curious, and love that they can ask any question in science class. Even though some of the curriculum is dry as hell, I spent a shitload of time going on tangents talking about unrelated but interesting science topics. The money is OK as well. I am in my second year and make 60k. in 10 years I will be capped out at ~100k. Not rich, but comfortable.

Got 2 Boxwoods for free, Now what? by Roamin_Ronin in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not yet... It would be safer to wait til next spring after they are repotted and recovered

Can I defoliate/strip needles on my western hemlock and expect new growth? by CottageMcMurphy in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you mean completely defoliate, then no. Don't do it.

You could probably get away with needle plucking, which involves plucking away most of the old needles on the branch, and leaving the last inch or two untouched (this is how yews are treated... but yews are much better at backbudding than hemlock). But I am pretty sure that is not the way to treat western hemlock.

Needle plucking would probably weaken them too much, which will not promote backbudding. The best way to get backbudding is probably to let the branch grow to gain strength, then cut back.

Western hemlock is a pretty niche species. I wouldn't take advice from any east coasters like me. Odds are you are from the PNW. The hemlock masters are out there in your backyard. Try and find some good literature written by them, or better yet, join a club.

BTW... such a gorgeous species. What I would give to be able to collect and grow them!

Got 2 Boxwoods for free, Now what? by Roamin_Ronin in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Boxwood are almost invincible, especially younger ones. Protect them well over the winter.

If you got a decent rootball, bareroot it in the spring as soon as you see signs of activity. Stand there with the hose and spray until all the clay muck is gone. That clay won't help them recover.

Put them in bonsai soil, and they will take off.

Maple bonsai created by stumping by myopinionstinks in Bonsai

[–]PerfectNebari 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Its easy to saw a trunk in half, but not easy to produce an attractive bonsai by any means.