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- Chinese Elm help. Dropping leaves | Bonsai Nut
What is your experience with the chinese elms dropping leaves Here are a couple images of my elm: For comparison, I have a couple other bonsai; I have a field maple, that has no moss on the substrate but basically also grows in the volcanic gravel No problem for him, the saucer is also often filled with water and the tree grows like crazy
- Siberian Elm Progression | Bonsai Nut
I’ve got several varieties but have more Siberian Elms than anything else Not because Siberian elm is some unkept bonsai gem of a tree, but because they are hardy, they respond to EVERYTHING, and they are extremely plentiful here in the 505
- Elm budding - Bonsai Nut
Are Elms late to wake up as compared to other species? Reason I ask is last summer I bought my first Elm at the Bonsai show Nice little tree that I think has some potential It spent the winter in the shed storage and just took it out about 2 weeks ago No signs of buds yet at all It's still
- pruning Chinese elm--when to stop before end of growing season first . . .
I have two Chinese elms that are constantly growing, summer heat of Oklahoma (7b), more recent cooler weather lately, doesn't matter Grow, grow, grow Good signs, I think, and pretty standard for this species But, my questions pertains to getting ready for winter: should I stop pruning and
- Best fertilizer for Chinese Elm? - Bonsai Nut
I fertilize elms in training about monthly and twice a year once they are trained A good healthy elm really needs minimal fertilizer, otherwise the leaves are too large, shoots grow too fast and internodes get too big all things you don't want on an elm
- New Chinese Elm beginner | Bonsai Nut
Chinese elms are sometimes promoted as indoor bonsai The vast majority of people who try that end up disappointed by dead and dying indoor Chinese elms Mot sites indoors are way too dark for most trees even though we find light levels comfortable, there's not enough of the right spectrum for trees
- When is a cork bark elm, a cork bark elm? | Bonsai Nut
There are definitely quite a few cork bark elms Ulmus parvifolia 'cork bark' is the usual one we refer to as cork bark elm but it has been known under a range of names down here too - Ulmus davidii; Ulmus parvifolia var Davidii; Ulmus parvifolia 'Seiju' also develops corky bark but much smaller leaves
- Siberian Elm Advice- From Seed | Bonsai Nut
Siberian elms are pretty vigorous trees and like most elms, they can take dramatic root reduction (like 95 percent) at the right time Also your location dictates what you can do with them right now If you're in an area that is winter now, working roots, trunk reduction etc is not in the cards until early spring arrives
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