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The First Steps To Indoor Bonsai Tree Success

Ulmus parvifolia bonsai

Image by 1967geezer via Flickr

Growing an indoor bonsai tree can be a great hobby full of rewards and relaxation. Or, it can be a frustrating experience that ends up costing a lot of money with nothing to show for it.

What makes the difference? There is a plain and simple answer – knowledge and patience.

Does this mean that the beginner has no hope of being successful? No! It just means that before starting the wonderful journey into the world of bonsai, you must make sure that you have the basic knowledge to maximize your chance for success.

Two of the first steps are choosing a optimal location and choosing the correct species. Continue reading The First Steps to Indoor bonsai Tree Success


How To Make A Bonsai Tree

Shanti Bithi Demo.jpg

Image by OpenEye via Flickr

People are usually fascinated when they see bonsai trees for the first time. Some think that the trees are special dwarf varieties and that is why the trees are so small. But bonsai trees are made from standard varieties of tree.

For those who would like to learn how to make a bonsai tree there are many questions. But take heart, with the right guidance it is possible to acquire all the skills and knowledge necessary to grow beautiful bonsai trees. The techniques needed are similar to those used in general horticulture.

Here are 6 methods to acquire a bonsai tree.

1. Buy a ready-made bonsai. Many stores sell what they describe as ‘bonsai trees’ but you should think twice before buying from a supermarket or garage. These are often not bonsai trees at all.

If you want a good specimen you should go to a specialist nursery.  These bonsai trees can be expensive due to transport costs and the length of time taken to grow the tree but it will be well worth the investment. Continue reading How to Make A bonsai Tree


To Begin Growing Bonsai Trees, Select the Appropriate Pot Size

When it comes to selecting a bonsai pot, it’s a matter of choosing a style and setting your future expectations straight. I assume you already grasp that to properly grow beautiful bonsai trees you’ve got to set aside some effort in choosing not just the plant you prefer, but additionally the correct pot it will grow into.

The connection between the plant and its pot is a durable one, that sometimes gets described as an image, the tree, framed by the pot. And this can only be a match you make when you initially plant the bonsai, with no second thoughts. A pot is forever, like diamonds and marriages. Well, like diamonds for sure.

If you would like to cut the plant into a explicit form, opt for a pot of the suitable size. Don’t even try moving your bonsai to a completely different pot as you modify your furnitures. There’s a significant risk of harming your tree and this is not the proper way to think about Bonsai Tree Growing.

Recall how a real size plant grows: ever noticed how its roots travel underground and through concrete slabs and even marble? The identical process applies for a miniature bonsai tree, even if it can not have the strength necessary to break a pot. Continue reading To Begin Growing bonsai Trees, Select the Appropriate Pot Size


Indoor Bonsai Care

bonsai

Image by miki via Flickr

Properly caring for your indoor bonsai tree is essential. But by following just a few simple growing instructions, you can grow really beautiful bonsai trees.

Before beginning, make sure the tree you choose is one that will do well indoors. Some trees just need too much light to grow well indoors.

Once you are sure that your bonsai plant can be grown indoors, you are all set. By following these few basic tip, you should have no problem growing healthy indoor bonsai trees.

The First thing you should keep in mind when growing the indoor bonsai Tree is choosing the right growing environment. Your bonsai Tree should be kept in a room that is just the right temperature, not too hot and not too cold. In addition, the room should have a source of natural light. You will want to keep your indoor bonsai Tree in a room with plenty of large windows to allow your tree to receive as much indirect sunlight as possible.
Another important factor to growing the indoor bonsai Tree is using the correct soil. Not only do you want the highest quality soil available, but also you may need to use different types of soil for the various bonsai Trees. The best way to determine which soil is right for the type of indoor bonsai Tree that you intend to grow is to visit a gardening store and ask them. Make sure that you inform them exactly which type of bonsai Tree you need the soil for.
Not applying fertilizer correctly can be devastating to your indoor bonsai Tree. This is a common mistake for beginners. The indoor bonsai Tree needs to be given a water-soluble fertilizer at various times. It is also important that the fertilizer be applied only when the soil is wet. In addition, it is recommended that you use the highest quality fertilizer available.
Watering your indoor bonsai Tree correctly is easily one of the most important elements of growing the tree successfully. If you donít water enough the tree becomes dehydrated and soon dies; watering too much drowns the tree with a similar result. A good rule to follow when watering your indoor bonsai Tree is to wait until the soil begins to dry out but is not completely dry. At this point you want to add enough water that it saturates the soil and seeps out the bottom. Donít water again until the soil begins to dry out.
Pruning the indoor bonsai Tree is also important to successfully growing these trees. There are two different steps to pruning the bonsai Tree. In the spring the branches of the trees should be trimmed, leaving only those branches you wish to keep. Root pruning should be done when the roots have bound up in the pot.
Once you have learned the basics of caring for the indoor bonsai Tree, you will find these to be wonderful plants for your home.Your indoor bonsai tree requires proper care to survive and flourish. But by following a few simple growing procedures, you can grow beautiful bonsai trees. Just keep these few basic tips in mind, and  you should have no problem growing healthy bonsai trees indoors.

Growing Environment

The first thing to keep in mind when growing the indoor bonsai tree is choosing the right growing environment. Your bonsai tree should be kept in a room that has plenty of light and just the right temperature, not too hot and not too cold.

The room must have a good source of natural light. You will want to keep your indoor bonsai tree large windows to allow your tree to receive as much indirect sunlight as possible.

The farther north you live, the more likely you will need those windows to face south to get enough light in the winter (or the opposite, in the Southern Hemisphere).

Rich Soil

Another important factor to growing the indoor bonsai Tree is using the correct soil. Not only do you want the highest quality soil available, but also you may need to use different types of soil for the various bonsai Trees.

The best way to determine which soil is right for the type of indoor bonsai Tree that you intend to grow is to visit a gardening store and ask them. Make sure that you inform them exactly which type of bonsai Tree you need the soil for. Continue reading Indoor Bansai Care


12 Bonsai Basic Styles

Zelkova serrata

Image via Wikipedia Zelkova serrata, favored for Broom style.

Bonsai, as a Japanese art form, is more regulated than itís Chinese counterpart, the penjing. bonsai attempts to achieve the ideal tree, while penjing attempts to reproduce nature. This is why perfect styling exists in bonsai if you obey the ërulesí, while penjing leave you free to your creation. As a result these are the basic styles :
Broom (Hokidachi or Hoki-zukuri)
A very harmonious style, this form has branches that develop at a certain height, forming an upside broom. This styling is mainly achieved through a technique called the ìVî cut. The trunk is chopped where you want the branch to start to develop and then a deep V cut is performed on the remaining trunk. This will induce buds to break near the cut. Zelkova serrata are notorious for this styling but maple and other deciduous species can easily be styled that way.
Formal Upright (Chokkan)
A tree styled the ìchokkanî way has a straight trunk tapering graciously from bottom to top. The first and biggest branch is often situated at 1/3 of the desired height of the tree and is on the right or the left. The following branch is situated on the opposite side, while the third is in the back creating the perception depth. As we look at the branch structure from bottom to top, the branches are getting thinner, creating a pyramidal shape.
Informal Upright (Moyogi)
This style is very similar to the previously mentionned style as the same rules of design apply, however, the trunk is not straight but rather forms a sinuous shape while remaining tapered. This style is commonly used with conifers.
Slanting (Shakan)
Once again, this style is the same as the formal upright except that the trunk is leaning on one side. Branches are grown uniformly on the trunk like the formal/informal upright styles but the apex is tilted to the opposite side of the trunk giving a visual balanced effect.
Cascade (Kengai)
This styling requires an inclined trunk that is preferably at a 45 degree angle. The major portion of the foliage is below the pot line and sometimes goes beyond the pot itself. It often represents a tree growing on the side of cliff. A deep pot is used for this style.
Semi-cascade (Han-Kengai)
Similar to the Kengai style, this style also has an inclinated trunk. However, the foliage remains at the height of the pot line. In nature, we can see this style near a waterway, the foliage having grown on the side and leaning towards the water. While the cascade style uses a deeper pot, this style uses a medium depth pot.
Windswept (Fukinagashi)
A ìwindsweptî tree represents a tree that has been growing in a certain shape due to natural elements . Often caused by strong wind, the trunk is always inclinated in a certain direction and all branches have grown on the same side.
Literati (Bunjin)
This styling is often represented in Japanese paintings. It is a tree with a tall and sinuous trunk. The foliage only grows near the summit of the tree. This styling is somewhat an exception to the rigorous rules of bonsai because it does not have specific rules. It represents what the bunjin movement is in Japan: the search for liberty.
Group/Forest (Yose-ue)
This styling often represents a forest or a small cluster of trees. It is supposed to be styled in a way that will clearly represent the growing habits of trees in a group. Many techinques can be used to achieve this styling and many perception techniques are used to create the illusion of a forest, or as Naka would say, ìhaving the quality of the invisible beauty of natureî. To respect the Japanese art form, an odd number of trees is prefered for this styling.
Raft (Ikadabuki)
The same rules of the group planting apply to this style. However, all of the trunks emerge from one common trunk. This technique is often achieved with a branch placed verticaly in the soil. The roots form this branch and the upper part of the vertical branch develop secondary branches that will eventually become the trunks.
Multi-trunk Style (Sokan – Sankan)
This multi-trunk style has different possibilities. The first, which is called ìSokanî, consists of two trunks emerging from the same visible roots (nebari). The styling of the upper part of the tree must respect the same rules as the formal / informal upright styles previously described. Another variance consists of the same but with three trunks emerging from the visible roots. This is called ìSankanî. You can also have more than three trunks but to respect Japanese bonsai, it is prefered to have an odd number of trunks.
Roots Over Rock (Ishitsuki)
This styling has the specific charactreristics of having many visible roots growing over a rock and finding their way to the pot/soil.
Patrick from
http://www.mishobonsai.com

Bonsai, as a Japanese art form, is more regulated than itís Chinese counterpart, the penjing. Bonsai attempts to achieve the ideal tree, while penjing attempts to reproduce nature.

This is why perfect styling exists in bonsai if you obey the rules, while penjing leaves you free to your creation.

As a result these are the basic styles :

Broom (Hokidachi or Hoki-zukuri)

A very harmonious style, this form has branches that develop at a certain height, forming an upside broom. This styling is mainly achieved through a technique called the ìVî cut.

The trunk is chopped where you want the branch to start to develop and then a deep V cut is performed on the remaining trunk. This will induce buds to break near the cut. Zelkova serrata are notorious for this styling but maple and other deciduous species can easily be styled that way.

Formal Upright (Chokkan)

A tree styled the ìchokkanî way has a straight trunk tapering graciously from bottom to top. The first and biggest branch is often situated at 1/3 of the desired height of the tree and is on the right or the left.

The following branch is situated on the opposite side, while the third is in the back creating the perception depth. As we look at the branch structure from bottom to top, the branches are getting thinner, creating a pyramidal shape.

Informal Upright (Moyogi)

This style is very similar to the previously mentionned style as the same rules of design apply. However, the trunk is not straight but rather forms a sinuous shape while remaining tapered. This style is commonly used with conifers. Continue reading 12 bonsai Basic Styles