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- Newsgroups: alt.bonsai
- Subject: Re: Next project?
- Message-ID: <keith.51@intaud.usu.edu>
- From: keith@intaud.usu.edu (Keith Sedgwick)
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 13:52:48 GMT
- References: <1gajalINNcr5@male.EBay.Sun.COM> <1garisINNd7a@male.EBay.Sun.COM> <1992Dec20.233845.28735@netcom.com>
- Organization: Utah State University (USU)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: keith.usu.edu
- Lines: 92
-
- In article <1992Dec20.233845.28735@netcom.com> aldridge@netcom.com (Jacquelyn Aldridge) writes:
-
-
- > Fantastic day today. Went to East Bay Nursery in Berkeley. It's on
- >2332 San Pablo, which is a block or so south of University on San Pablo.
- >Met a guy there named Bentley who showed me some of the bonsai he'd done.
- >One of the other nurserymen showed me a corokia contoneaster, I'd not seen
- >one before.
-
- > So, I bought a corokia contoneaster, a japanese boxwood, and a
- >feather cypress (chamaecyparis pisifera).
-
- > The corokia contoneaster has upright multiple trunks with
- >perpendicular branching straight out, but crossing and recrossing each
- >other on the interior of the tree. It looks like something out of
- >Modred's forest, earie (excuse spelling here). In a gallon pot and about a
- >foot tall. Tiny leaves, they open up black like the branches and then turn
- >green. 9- each.
-
- > The japanese boxwoods had great trunks and good roots. They remind
- >me of English Oaks. Upright single and double trunks, looking aged already.
- >I chose a smaller one, about a foot high. There was one in the back part of
- >the lot that I'd have loved to have. Inch diameter trunk, about a foot and
- >a half high. Absolutely gorgeous for a large single standing tree. The
- >smaller ones were 9-, the larger up to 25-.
-
- > The feather cypress is my pride and joy. It's about two feet high
- >with a two foot diameter umbrella shaped "top". It has about eight major
- >branches coming from a common short trunk. These branch and rebranch to
- >form the top. It looks somewhat like an open,multibrached olive in the
- >branches. But what it looks most like are the trees that grow along some of
- >the northern beaches in California. Range: 25- to 50-.
- >
- > There were about 6 more corkia there, dozens of small boxwood,
- >about 7 large boxwoods, and three more of the feather cypress. One of the
- >feather cypress was a magnificent upright form.
-
- >Trunk almost like a
- >readwood in growth. 2 1/2 or three feet high. Well branched and filled out.
- >It was 50-. The one I chose was 30-.
-
- > There were lots of great shrub/trees to chose from. One type I liked but
- >didn't get was a gotesque form of curvy branches which twisted back and
- >around. Beautiful specimen trees. About two feet high. I think they were
- >called filberts.
-
- > Now all sit in the kitchen to be admired and so I can choose what
- >kind of pot to put them in. I think the smaller ones will go into
- >rectangular pots, smallish. The large feather cypress in a large round pot,
- >probably one like I saw at the nursery which had a profile which tapers
- >down conically so the body of the pot isn't very noticable.
-
- > Hope you are all enjoying the holidays. --Jackie--
-
- Hi Jackie:
-
- Boy, what a treat to read your post this morning. After reading
- your descriptions and information about your new trees I had to write
- and thank you for your inspiring message!!
-
- We had a Corokia contoneaster in our last bonsai show. It was
- about 18" high and looked so good I bought a small one from the local
- bonsai nursery. The one in the show was potted in a light grey, un-
- glazed pot about the same shade as the bark. It looked very good!!
- If you could find a pot the same shade of grey as the contoneaster's
- trunk, you wouldn't be disappointed. I love the leaves! They
- remind me of small baseball bats, with a "club" at the tip.
-
- This small tree will be one of my favorites. This is the second
- one I've had. Just a word of caution -- I sent one to bonsai heaven last
- summer. Last sumnmer I was using a homemade organic fertilizer cake and
- my Corokia developed a case of maggots. I got after the little buggers
- with some diazinon dust. The maggots died and so did my tree 8-(.. If
- you develop any kind of pest, you might want to use something other than
- Diazinon.
-
- Japanese boxwoods make excellent bonsai. The only draw back
- I've heard about them is their slooow growth. I guess they only grow
- about 1/4" per year. One of the best styles is an "oak" type. I have
- a triple trunk that is about 18 years old. It started out as a
- twin trunk, but two years ago I brought the 1st branch up and split
- the trunk, down to the soil line. It is now a triple trunk and looks
- much better.
-
- Thanks again for you post. Merry Christmas and Happy Growing!
-
- Keith
-
- KEITH@INTAUD.USU.EDU
- Keith Sedgwick
-
-
-