Wonderful videos, I recently acquired and old chinese elm Ulmus Parvifolia, and its loosing its bark, I live in texas, so I am not sure if that has anything to do with it. Is this normal, I know some elms do loose their bark in the fall, but i am no sure if that might be the case. Thanks for any info you can provide.
my bonsai's branches are dry and lifeless, although there are new smaller branches growing underneath these... i just dont think this is right? the branches near the top should be sprouting new leaves i'm sure, by now.
any advice would be nice. i love my bonsai to pieces and i want to know how to look after its branches more..
That is why we prune the branches. If done properly, the tree remains the same size, but the trunk and primary branches get progressively thicker, while the foliage canopy stays the same size.
I have a chinese elm bonsai i recently purchased and some places i read they CAN be fully indoor bonsai and other books and people say that they need to go through a short dormancy since it is almost spring i have a while to worry about this problem but id like to know early on because it will effect how i treat the bonsai obviously ive had trouble with temperate bonsai before during their dormancy and i just need to know is a chinese elm INDOOR or OUTDOOR
They are not fully indoor trees unless you have a sunroom that faces south. Chinese elms need a certain amount of sunlight, even in the winter. Although they go dormant, they never go completely dormant. They do retain a few leaves and photosynthesize at a very low level through the winter. I keep all of mine outdoors, and you should too, unless you get snow and heavy frost in the winter. They should be protected from subfreezing temperatures.
both. i have a chineese elm , you can grow it both outdoors in indoors, if outdoors in autumn it will lose all it's leaves and should be then cept in 0 -3 degrees celsius. If indoors it will reamain evergreen all winter. I had it indoors and disovered a litle problem : you need to pinch of old leaves in spring , because they dont look nice. That is the only problem i had
It depends on the species of tree. Most deciduous trees can be pruned at any time during dormancy with no ill effect. With evergreens you must be very careful as to how much greenery you remove, as they need a certain amount of foliage mass even during dormancy in order to sustain necessary life activity.
Alright. One of my trees. is about 7 years old and its a juniper. So your saying that when I prune it during winter i need to be careful with how much i prune?
@Bunzy98 You do have to be careful how much you remove from a juniper in winter because if the temp is above freezing, they are not completely dormant. They are still photosynthesizing and still putting on slow root growth. I never remove more than 30% of the foliage mass during a winter pruning, and if I get a freeze and the tree goes fully dormant, I do not prune until the tree starts to emerge from dormancy.
Click on my screen name, and that takes you to my channel. In the upper right is a box labeled "uploads" -- that is a list, in chronological order, of all my videos.
Wonderful videos, I recently acquired and old chinese elm Ulmus Parvifolia, and its loosing its bark, I live in texas, so I am not sure if that has anything to do with it. Is this normal, I know some elms do loose their bark in the fall, but i am no sure if that might be the case. Thanks for any info you can provide.
Iggynawcio 6 months ago in playlist Bonsai Studys
Where is the best possible place to put my bonsai
darrenoaten12 8 months ago
your videos are a great help to me as i have just started keeping bonsai,
natrjack965 10 months ago
i luv your trees in the back ground, very nice, im nwe to the hobby myself.
5963128 11 months ago
my bonsai's branches are dry and lifeless, although there are new smaller branches growing underneath these... i just dont think this is right? the branches near the top should be sprouting new leaves i'm sure, by now.
any advice would be nice. i love my bonsai to pieces and i want to know how to look after its branches more..
jordbriie 1 year ago
Comment removed
snakeeyes2424 1 year ago
my tree's leaves keep on falling off and they're the healthy green; could it possibly be the season change because I don't want my tree to die.
GhillieMan482 1 year ago
This tree has some serious potential. I'd love to see it in 10 years.
SanRafaelSwell 1 year ago
can you make a video of how to start a chinese elm? because i dont want to mess mine up :)
cucu8822 1 year ago
do you use the normal arts and crafts scissors? or the special scissors people say bonsais need?
Myobokuuzan 2 years ago
New to bonsai so I'm sure this is a dumb question, but how exactly do you keep them from getting taller/wider?
panzerkampfswagen6 2 years ago
That is why we prune the branches. If done properly, the tree remains the same size, but the trunk and primary branches get progressively thicker, while the foliage canopy stays the same size.
chasnsx 2 years ago
I have a chinese elm bonsai i recently purchased and some places i read they CAN be fully indoor bonsai and other books and people say that they need to go through a short dormancy since it is almost spring i have a while to worry about this problem but id like to know early on because it will effect how i treat the bonsai obviously ive had trouble with temperate bonsai before during their dormancy and i just need to know is a chinese elm INDOOR or OUTDOOR
TheGlompme 2 years ago
They are not fully indoor trees unless you have a sunroom that faces south. Chinese elms need a certain amount of sunlight, even in the winter. Although they go dormant, they never go completely dormant. They do retain a few leaves and photosynthesize at a very low level through the winter. I keep all of mine outdoors, and you should too, unless you get snow and heavy frost in the winter. They should be protected from subfreezing temperatures.
chasnsx 2 years ago
both. i have a chineese elm , you can grow it both outdoors in indoors, if outdoors in autumn it will lose all it's leaves and should be then cept in 0 -3 degrees celsius. If indoors it will reamain evergreen all winter. I had it indoors and disovered a litle problem : you need to pinch of old leaves in spring , because they dont look nice. That is the only problem i had
MrSmartComment 2 years ago
If i were to prune my trees during the winter season would it effect the tree. or whenever its in dormancy does it matter?
Bunzy98 2 years ago
It depends on the species of tree. Most deciduous trees can be pruned at any time during dormancy with no ill effect. With evergreens you must be very careful as to how much greenery you remove, as they need a certain amount of foliage mass even during dormancy in order to sustain necessary life activity.
chasnsx 2 years ago
Alright. One of my trees. is about 7 years old and its a juniper. So your saying that when I prune it during winter i need to be careful with how much i prune?
Bunzy98 2 years ago
@Bunzy98 You do have to be careful how much you remove from a juniper in winter because if the temp is above freezing, they are not completely dormant. They are still photosynthesizing and still putting on slow root growth. I never remove more than 30% of the foliage mass during a winter pruning, and if I get a freeze and the tree goes fully dormant, I do not prune until the tree starts to emerge from dormancy.
chasnsx 2 years ago
beautiful stock. well done
bhellige47 2 years ago
Wonderful workshop and just what I needed right when I needed it. Is there any easy way I can find a lit of ALL your bonsai videos?
whyaz69 2 years ago
Click on my screen name, and that takes you to my channel. In the upper right is a box labeled "uploads" -- that is a list, in chronological order, of all my videos.
chasnsx 2 years ago
i like your work Chas ... i also really like chinese elms ... i have a small one it grows like crazy .. may i ask where are you located ?
zzzxppix 2 years ago
Stay tuned. I have some really big projects planned once the weather cools.
chasnsx 2 years ago
MY chinese elm comes tomorrow i cannot wait!
CurseOrange 2 years ago