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This is a discussion on Treebeards Progression within the Evergreen Trees forums, part of the Bonsai category; 2009-contest-04-Taxus:...
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#1 (permalink) |
![]() Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: New Hampshire, USA,
Posts: 641
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2009-contest-04-Taxus
2009-contest-04-Taxus:
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"Resolve to be tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving, and tolerant with the weak and wrong....because sometime in your life you will have been all of these" And I further resolve to click on an ad, each time I visit, to help support the site and to be welcoming to lurking guests when you join! After all, you're already here. |
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#2 (permalink) |
![]() Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: New Hampshire, USA,
Posts: 641
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Congrats Treebeard55 winner of the 2nd annual Spring Styling Contest!!!
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"Resolve to be tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving, and tolerant with the weak and wrong....because sometime in your life you will have been all of these" And I further resolve to click on an ad, each time I visit, to help support the site and to be welcoming to lurking guests when you join! After all, you're already here. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Warsaw IN, USA
USDA zone 5b
Posts: 511
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Thanks, Jim and Matt. And thanks to any and all who voted for this tree.
There's a bit of a story here. My 8-year-old daughter, who's registered here as nmoor1, was with me at Lowe's as I browsed for a tree for this contest. She also -- and independently -- thought this tree was the best candidate we looked at on the sales bench. She already has an artist's eye, if her dad does say so himself.. She wasn't able to help with the styling: she had already left to spend the summer in Washington state with her mom, who's serving as a camp nurse until early August.
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Treebeard 55 Steve Moore http://hoosierbonsai.blogspot.com The most important bonsai tool is your brain. |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Tree Hugger In Training
![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Cheshire, GB
Posts: 810
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Great idea Treebeard, I hope my children in the future will be as tree obsessed as me.
As with the confessions, I confess that my tree was the Cedrus, I've always wanted this species of tree, and when I finally had a chance to buy one I was more than happy to oblige! I was greatly surprised when it got 4 votes, I think thats the highest vote any of my trees have ever had in styling contests and BOTM, so thanks to all who voted for it! Hopefully next year more people will enter the contest, and be willing to spend the time to vote, I refuse to believe that of all the members of the site only 16 visited in 14 days. -Matt-
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R.I.P Our Great Friend - Prowler, 24th November 2008 |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Warsaw IN, USA
USDA zone 5b
Posts: 511
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Thanks, Mike. Keep working on that boxwood. A few years down the road you may enter it successfully in BOTM.
Matt, I agree: it seems hard to believe that so few people were on the site. I'm sure you, Jim and Phil are feeling a bit frustrated about that. Since we're "'fessin' up," I'll admit I put a reminder at Bonsai-Nut forum, since there a number of people there who are also members here. Was going to do it at BonsaiVault, too, but most of the "overlap" there is also on B-N. Don't know how much effect it may have had ...
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Treebeard 55 Steve Moore http://hoosierbonsai.blogspot.com The most important bonsai tool is your brain. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Warsaw IN, USA
USDA zone 5b
Posts: 511
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Update
Hello, all,
Just thought I would post an update on this yew's progress. This tree has grown well over the summer. It gets direct sun off-and-on for probably 6 hours/day, and the rest of the time is in open shade. The first picture show this tree as of 2 days ago, nothing masked. This is the probable front. The second shows the tree with a large, low sacrifice branch masked. There a few colored arrows. The blue one points to the base of what will be the eventual main back branch. It was growing straight up; so I notched the base, wired it, and bent it over. The yellow arrow points to the zip tie I'm using to help keep the notch tightly closed while it heals. The orange arrow points to a branch that I may well remove eventually, tho the jury's still out. And the blue/purple line shows where this tree will be layered in the next year or two. Those stubs right above this line aren't root stubs, they're branch stubs! As with most nursery-grown trees, this yew was repotted deep the last time, with much of the trunk buried. I actually have no idea how deep the present nebari lies. But this tree will be a semi-cascade, so I want the nebari at this line. The last picture shows the tree from above, with that major sacrifice branch masked.
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Treebeard 55 Steve Moore http://hoosierbonsai.blogspot.com The most important bonsai tool is your brain. |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Warsaw IN, USA
USDA zone 5b
Posts: 511
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Further update
I just needle-plucked this yew, and one other, this afternoon. Hopefully there will be a lot of buds breaking close to the branch bases next spring, so I can keep this fellow compact.
I'm going to repot this tree next spring, and the design might just change once I see what's below the present soil line! Stay tuned.
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Treebeard 55 Steve Moore http://hoosierbonsai.blogspot.com The most important bonsai tool is your brain. |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Warsaw IN, USA
USDA zone 5b
Posts: 511
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Latest update
Hello, all!
As I mentioned earlier, I think, my original intention was to air-layer this tree just below the branches I used, and get a shohin sized semi-cascade. But Tom Brown persuaded me to check the rest of the trunk, and the existing nebari, before I proceeded with an air-layer. I decided that, yes, I should at least check it. A week or so ago I de-wired it, and, as can be expected, most of the branches reverted to one degree or another. (First picture.) I wasn't too surprised, or dismayed: I can re-wire in a year or two! I also repotted it into a training pot (alias a hard-sided microwaveable roaster) and checked out what had been buried, when it was in the nursery pot. I decided that an air-layer is still the best way to go with this tree. The air-layer will have to wait a year, but now I'm sure. The air-layer will be at the blue line in the second photo. I'll also remove the almost-hidden back branch shown by the orange arrow. Yes, the tree is tilted in the new pot. That's so that, when I right it later, the branches won't need quite such drastic repositioning!
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Treebeard 55 Steve Moore http://hoosierbonsai.blogspot.com The most important bonsai tool is your brain. |
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#9 (permalink) |
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A bit "Windswept"
![]() Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Chicago, Ill.
USDA Zone 5
Posts: 1,051
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Thanks treebeard. I appreciate your keeping us updated as to the progress of the tree. Not many, well, actually none, have taken the time to do so in the past.
Oops...by the way, it's looking really good and.....still alive! ~Phil~
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Please, always keep in mind that the typewritten word does not always convey what you wish to say, and to always treat others as you would have them treat you. Think twice-submit once. I started out with nothing....and still have most of it. "Its hell out there, give them hell back." ~ Prowler/Victor Gray 12/31/1943 - 11/24/2008 |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Warsaw IN, USA
USDA zone 5b
Posts: 511
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Spring 2011 Update
My little yew came thru the winter fine. Foliage buds are just starting to break, so I performed the airlayer today.
The first picture shows the tree before I started, from the eventual front (or angle pretty close thereto.) I ringed the trunk, taking off all the cambium from the stripped area. The stripped area is as tall as it is to prevent the tree, if at all possible, from bridging the gap: I want it to sprout new roots instead! Rooting hormone powder (Hormex, I think, #1, which was all the garden center had) was liberally applied with a Q-tip; spraying with water first helped it stick where it's needed. The plastic sleeve was cut from .04-mil polyethylene plastic. As some of you will know, research by the late Dr. J.R. Cody of Texas showed that polyethylene that thin will pass oxygen and carbon dioxide, but not water or water vapor. The sleeve was filled with wet sphagnum, to above the upper edge of the stripped area, and then closed with ordinary packing tape and a few staples. The tree is spending the nite indoors, since our low tonite is supposed to get down to about 34 F (1 C.) Tomorrow I'll put an aluminum-foil shield around the upper part of the sphagnum ball, to deflect the sun, and find the tree a semi-shaded spot outside. I hope to be able to detach the upper part, with new roots, at the end of the summer, so that it can have a couple of months to adjust after I pot it up.
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Treebeard 55 Steve Moore http://hoosierbonsai.blogspot.com The most important bonsai tool is your brain. |
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