home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!newsgate.watson.ibm.com!news.ans.net!malgudi.oar.net!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!rutgers!sun-barr!male.EBay.Sun.COM!shootist!tmkelly
- From: tmkelly@shootist.EBay.Sun.COM (Tom Kelly)
- Newsgroups: alt.bonsai
- Subject: Re: just curious
- Message-ID: <1ee0e5INNco0@male.EBay.Sun.COM>
- Date: 18 Nov 92 18:01:41 GMT
- References: <Bxp1v4.IHr@knot.ccs.queensu.ca>
- Reply-To: tmkelly@shootist.EBay.Sun.COM
- Organization: Sun Microsystems, Inc.
- Lines: 45
- NNTP-Posting-Host: shootist.ebay.sun.com
-
-
- In article IHr@knot.ccs.queensu.ca, dale@hecate.phy.queensu.ca (Dale Swanston) writes:
- > My question: What makes a tree a bonsai tree?
-
- I waited for a few days, hoping someone else would tackle this one...
-
- Bonsai translated means tree pot (or is it pot tree?)... any way, the first element of what
- makes a Bonsai, is a tree in a pot (or shrub, or.. well, you get the idea). Then to accurately
- depict with that specimen, what a tree in nature might look like (especially a mature tree or
- trees). So bonsai, in part, is a tree in a pot that has been trained to look like a mature
- tree in a natural setting. (the above is MHO, and may not be complete, or even correct by
- the standards of others)
-
- > I see people posting things like there a bonsais out there growing wild just waiting to be
- > adopted (even in cold old Canada?).
-
- What are growing wild are "stock" ... specimens that can be "adopted" (called collecting)
- and transplanted, trained, and made into a Bonsai. The larger the specimen, the more
- difficult this can be, and the lower the success rate.
-
- Yes, even in cold Canada... specimens are collected from high in the Sierra Mountains, in
- Northern Minnesota, and almost anywhere. Some are better suited for Bonsai than others, and
- that is one of the best reasons for getting access to books or knowledgeable people that can
- help identify the species in your climate that are best.
-
-
- > What is it about the growing process that convinces the tree not to end up 10feet tall?
- > Is it the pruning process?
-
- The pruning is part of it, certainly, as is the limited space they are growing in (small pots),
- and the compact soil. Perhaps most contributory is the abbreviated root system. We prune the
- roots back every year or two or three (depending on the tree, it's age, etc)... to grow TALL,
- a large root network is necessary. A small good root system will allow a HEALTHY tree, but not
- a tall one.
-
- *Only one guy's opinion... any corrections, additions, edits, or amendments are welcome and
- appreciated.
-
-
- I hope this helps a bit, Dale.
- (oh, and don't wait `til you settle down... start today or this weekend... the time passes
- anyway, and you might as well have tree getting older and more beautiful while you're
- studying or whatever)
-
- Tk
-