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Shohin redwood update

July 5, 2024 by Jonas Dupuich

Three years ago I started working on a small coast redwood (see “Creating redwood bonsai: step 1” for details). Since then I’ve grown out some sacrifice branches and removed them when they reached the desired thickness. From here on out the goal is to create a silhouette that complements the trunk.

The main way to do this on redwoods is to pinch where you want a branch to bud back. If you pinch when the foliage is soft, you can expect buds to appear where you pinch. Here’s the tree before and after pinching.

Before pinching

Before pinching new growth

After trimming

After pinching

Some people stop at this point happy to have an attractive silhouette. I’m curious to find out if there’s a way to reveal more of the tree’s branch structure. Attractive branches are a key feature on mature redwoods and I want to show at least some degree of this even in small redwood bonsai.

After pinching the new growth, I thinned many of the shoots that didn’t contribute to an attractive branch structure. I’ll have to repeat the process for another year or two before the tree has the silhouette I have in mind for it, but you can now see some of the primary branches more clearly.

Coast redwood

Coast redwood – 5.5″

Back

Back side (or possible future front?)

I’ll repeat this process a few more times this year depending on how quickly the tree grows, give the tree break over winter, and get back to the pinching and thinning again next year.

News & Updates

  • If you’re looking to stock up on soil, now’s the time! I’m currently accepting bulk orders for Double Line akadama, Triple Line akadama, Aoki Blend, Banzai Blend, kanuma, and hyuga while supplies last. For more information about bulk orders, including current prices and availablility, see Wholesale Soil Pricing and Information.
  • I’ll be joining Bill Castellon and Randall Lee on a panel discussing how bonsai can inform landscape pruning on July 7th at 4:00pm (PDT). The event is hosted by the Aesthetic Pruner’s Association – learn more at the APA website.
  • Sponsorship opportunities are available for the Pacific Bonsai Expo – learn more here.
  • New episode of the Bonsai Wire Podcast – Chat with South African bonsai grower Richard Wright in which we discuss loss as a vehicle for focusing on what matters most in our collections.

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Filed Under: Bonsai Development Tagged With: Redwood

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Dawn Koetting says

    July 5, 2024 at 5:08 am

    Jonas, Do you use APL soil components or are there any changes for Coast Redwoods?

  2. Leigh Blake says

    July 5, 2024 at 5:42 am

    This is an interesting treatment of a Sequoia sempervirens and I appreciate the idea. I would like to follow this tree for a few year and see how the ramification of new branching develops..THANK YOU!!

  3. Hugo says

    July 5, 2024 at 8:09 am

    Great job. Thanks for sharing

  4. Marty Weiser says

    July 5, 2024 at 3:23 pm

    Jonas – How big a branch/trunk will reliably produce new shoots when cut back on a healthy redwood. Based upon, the creation blog post I am presuming a fairly large one. I am growing some seedlings in the Spokane area with winter protection to see if they will do better than the collected material we have purchased in the past. – Marty

    • Jonas Dupuich says

      July 5, 2024 at 5:08 pm

      Hi Marty – I’ve seen branches of all sizes bud back on redwood, from slender and green to large and covered with brown/gray bark. That said, not all branches will bud where pruned depending on the location and strength of the branch (more light and vigor = more chance of buds). If the tree is healthy, the shoot is strong, and the timing is good (it’s during the growing season, roughly March through September, give or take depending on the year), you can expect buds to pop on cut branches on the exterior of the tree.

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