Bonsai Tonight

Bonsai pests!

Posted in Bonsai Development by Jonas Dupuich on May 4, 2012

If you had asked me, two weeks ago, if my bonsai were healthy and insect free, I would have said yes. At a glance, they all looked great. Looking closer, however, I discovered that one of my pines looked dirty.

Aphids

Some dirt on the needles – this must mean…

Aphids! Aphids are most commonly found on bonsai with tender foliage, but they are not averse to feeding on pine. Fortunately, they’d only decided to inhabit one of my pines (and I can’t begin to guess why they chose the pine they did as it was surrounded by other pines that were completely free from aphids).

Aphids

Aphids hanging out between needles

Aphids

More aphids

Although they deserve swift attention, aphids are relatively easy to spot and eradicate – unlike the far more pernicious pine needle scale. I typically alternate between a variety of pesticides, oils, and soaps when I discover bonsai pests. After spraying, I watch affected trees closely to make sure the critters are truly dead and gone.

With the happy-go-lucky aphids under control, I took a closer look at selected trees in my garden only to find that my prime nemesis of late, the worm – master of camouflage and capable of munching every last variety in my backyard – has yet to vacate the premises. I plucked three from a hinoki that I’ve been spraying regularly for 6 months. I upped the dosage of systemic the tree has been receiving and promised myself I’d inspect the foliage more often. The worm’s camouflage makes it uncannily similar to the shoots it eats.

Juniper foliage and worm

Tiny, well-camouflaged worm and hinoki shoot

These demented creatures even ventured to munch on my pines last summer. I’d never seen worms eat pine shoots before, but I’m determined to keep this from becoming a habit. (I wrote about them eating juniper shoots in “Juniper Pests.”)

A far more common foe to the pine is the tiny spider mite. They aren’t much to look at, but signs of their presence are unmistakable. Compare the fresh green needles in the photo below with the longer, yellowish needles from last year.

Spider mite damage

Spider mite damage

Spider mites like hot and dry conditions. They prey on weak trees before healthy ones, but if the conditions are right, they can cause significant damage to any pine in a matter of days. A haunting tidbit from Wikipedia: “A single mature female can spawn a population of a million mites in a month or less.” Yuck!

A simple test utilizing low tech equipment – 1 sheet of white paper – is a good way to spot spider mites:

  1. Hold sheet of white paper below a branch
  2. Tap the branch
  3. Inspect the tiny specs that fall onto the paper
If the tiny specs move, odds are that’s spider mite. Spraying can rid the tree of mites in a straightforward fashion, but once needles are damaged, the tree looks unsightly until the following year’s needles mature and the old needles are removed.

Checking for spider mite

1. Tap the branch over white sheet of paper

Checking for spider mite

2. Check for mites

Before running out to check for bugs, I recommend you read Peter Tea’s account of Aichi-en’s battle against the bugs, “I love the smell of pesticides in the morning.”

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Bonsai fertilizer – follow-up

Posted in Bonsai Development by Jonas Dupuich on May 1, 2012

Last month I began using tea bags filled with fertilizer to feed my bonsai. Unfortunately, it only took a few days for me to realize that this technique didn’t work well as implemented. The bags started disappearing immediately. Critters tore through some of the bags and carried others away completely, leaving behind the toothpicks that were meant to keep the bags in place. Somehow they removed all of the bags from my best trees and only a few of the bags on the developing trees – I won’t even try to solve that one. Instead, I’ll go back to my time-tested fertilizer method – clumps of cottonseed meal and fish emulsion.

Tea bags on a pine forest

Tea bags intact on a pine forest

Tea bags on an exposed root pine

Tea bags on an exposed root pine

Cottonseed meal on a pine

Cottonseed meal on a pine

Cottonseed meal on a pine

More cottonseed meal

I usually start feeding my trees at some point between late January and mid March depending on the weather and the variety. If I’ve repotted a tree, I wait about 4 weeks before feeding it. I start by placing one or two clumps of cottonseed meal and add additional clumps every 1-3 weeks later until the majority of the pot is filled with fertilizer.

Cottonseed meal on a cryptomeria

Cottonseed meal feeding a recently separated cryptomeria

I supplement the cottonseed meal with fish emulsion (see “Bonsai Fertilizer” for details). Fish emulsion is a great, if stinky, fertilizer that I’m comfortable using on all bonsai varieties. I usually apply fish emulsion weekly, though I might apply it more or less frequently at various times depending on the season, the weather and the variety.

Fish emulsion

Fish emulsion

Ebihara fed his trees with diluted liquid fertilizer every three days (I don’t know what type of fertilizer he used). Others primarily rely on dry fertilizer that releases food whenever the trees are watered. I haven’t noticed big differences between liquid, dry, or other categories of fertilizer, but I do find that consistent application leads to the best results. And the best results, of course, depend on the goal of the fertilizing program. If I’m trying to increase the size of the trunk, I fertilize a lot. If I’m trying to ramify delicate branches on deciduous varieties, I fertilize very lightly and only after new leaves have hardened off.

As for the tea bags, I haven’t completely given up. I may yet try chili powder or some other caustic agent that’s harmful to vermin but safe for trees. And if I can get this right, I will celebrate and then post the results.

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New hinoki bonsai

Posted in Bonsai Development by Jonas Dupuich on April 27, 2012

I recently picked up a couple of large hinoki cypress with the aim of developing them as bonsai. They seemed healthy and had good sized trunks so I thought they’d warrant the effort.

Before repotting

Hinoki cypress - Chamaecyparis obtusa ‘Tempelhof’

Adding new trees to my collection never seems overly burdensome. I simply remove a few branches and repot the trees. Beyond that, they typically require little more than water and fertilizer for the remainder of the year.

Of course, this changes – sometimes dramatically – a few years down the road. If I find I don’t have the time to give a tree the attention it deserves, I move it along.

Trunk detail

Trunk detail

Based on what I could see above the soil line, the tree looked like it had a nice trunk. Finding the rootbase, however, would provide more useful information. As the rootbase was large, I grabbed a large chopstick and got to work.

Giant chopstick

Key repotting tool – large chopstick

The rootbase, it turns out, started about 6″ below the soil line. When I found it, I noticed a significant graft line. I continued bare-rooting half of the rootball and potted the tree in my standard mix of akadama, pumice and lava.

Graft line

The graft line

The lower part of the trunk is likely chamaecyparis obtusa, the rest of the tree, ‘Tempelhof.’ As the graft line is striking, I’m considering ways of improving the appearance of the lower trunk. I’ve thought about burying it, creating an air-layer, or simply living with it the way it is. I have no experience air-layering hinoki, and have heard mixed stories about its feasibility, so I remain curious about this option. I don’t think I could actually bury the nebari, which means I may end up living with this line.

After repotting

After cutback and repotting

I have a year to think about it. For now, I’ll focus on watering and fertilizing the tree, and delay any more dramatic decisions until next year.

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From landscape tree to bonsai – part 2

Posted in Bonsai Development by Jonas Dupuich on April 20, 2012

There are only so many ways to make a bonsai smaller – and cutting and bending seem to do most of the work. As my newest pine was almost two meters tall, some cutting was in order. Although I have yet to decide on the future of the tree, it’s clear that I don’t need the top branches in the final design.

The first cut

Making the first cut

The first cut

Red-sleeved arms provide assistance

I halved the top remaining branch with my second cut. That was enough to get the tree into the workshop for further refinement.

The second cut

Halving the top branch

Even after making these reductions, this is still a large pine at over three feet across.

The second cut

Not a small tree

Once I got the pine into the workshop, I cut some heavy secondary branches and removed old needles. Then I started repotting. I removed the nursery soil from half of the rootball and planted the tree in a mix of akadama, lava, and pumice.

Barerooting half of the rootball

Bare-rooting half of the rootball

The resulting three-branched tree leaves me with several fun options for the future.

After plucking old needles

Cutback, needle removal and repotting complete

I’ll admit, one hypothesis struck me immediately when I first saw the tree. I don’t know if it’s a great idea, but it’s made me curious. What I do know is that I want to show off the base of the trunk, especially on side B (see “From landscape tree to bonsai“). Hint – here’s a photo of the tree that got me thinking in this direction.

Black pine

Japanese black pine displayed at the 2011 Gomangoku in Okazaki

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