In November 2015 that tree looked like this:
Ficus Natalensis - November 2015 |
A few sharp bends and hardly any taper!
Although my neglect means that the trees are no closer to being bonsai than they were three years ago, the move to bigger pots has allowed them to grow big and tall and their trunks have fattened up considerably. Unfortunately the top growth has blocked light from the lower part of the trees and as a result, both have lost some lower branches. The tree above also developed a massive low branch which grew upwards, reaching a height twice that of the intended apex.
Same tree - March 2019 |
Under the circumstances I found myself having to treat it as nursery stock when I took it to a workshop on Saturday afternoon.
First I had to get both trees out of the greenhouse though, and that proved to be quite a mission as once again one had sent a root into the other one's pot and both had also sent roots through the slats of the shelf they were living on. To complicated matters further, the neighbouring orchid (a gift which I tend to ignore) had sent roots into both pots. That meant there were quite a lot of roots that had to be cut before I could move the trees.
Once at the workshop the first step was to remove that huge branch.
After removing the huge branch |
The tree was already looking better but it was rather top heavy, with a leader growing in the wrong direction. The club member I was working with recommended I cut back to a new leader, advice I was happy to follow, as I'd already said in 2015 that "At a later stage I might reduce the height further".
March 2019 - after pruning |
As it's still in the same pot, the change in the thickness of the trunk is pretty obvious.
I've left all the aerial roots for now as we're headed into winter. I'll decide whether to keep any of them when I repot the tree in spring - as long as I don't forget!!
As for the second tree, it looked like this when I removed it from the greenhouse:
Second tree - March 2019 |
I've removed a few dead branches so far and plan to cut it back to the lowest living branch, then wait for back budding before cutting in to a more suitable height. I'd like to make a short, fat little tree from this one.
No comments
Post a Comment