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  1. TheSteve

    Collecting. With or without permission?

    Kind of stunned that I stopped by after like eight or nine years away and this thread is still happening
  2. TheSteve

    New to bonsai, styling advice needed

    I refuse to offer any more constructive responses to this thread until Adiar apologizes for his velvet Elvis flaming
  3. TheSteve

    Have you noticed many Pollinators this year? (bugs)

    That would be general bonsai discussion. And I was referring to GM wheat not being grown here. I'm fully aware that the bulk of other edible plant commodities are GM in one way or another. Anyway, just thought this topic was pretty blatant and misplaced. I'm out of it now...
  4. TheSteve

    Have you noticed many Pollinators this year? (bugs)

    With all due respect I don't see where your anti-GM crop agenda fits into a bonsai discussion. Maybe you should try this in the tea house, or better yet, another forum since I don't think anyone has ever tried to create bonsai from GM corn or wheat (which isn't grown here).
  5. TheSteve

    Just thought this was interesting

    If the bulk of the sales were collected or trees grown in their own field then it seems like that net should be higher. But I think they rely on imported pot sales heavily and that will drive the net down right?
  6. TheSteve

    Recently "styled" shimpaku - any thoughts/suggestions?

    Just did this to the apex (in training) of a Pacific silver fir bunjin to get the branches to radiate in the directions I wanted instead of what it wanted. Twisting seems to speed up setting in experience and the full twisting of the cambium causes much faster thickening and wire biting as well...
  7. TheSteve

    Root grafting trunk for separation to a new tree

    The only problem with this is the math. roots grow back. a young and vigorous tree may grow back the bulk of it's roots between repottings, thereby gaining little ground while maintaining a tree in a weakened state for far longer. This is why I dislike blanket statements. In this case we are...
  8. TheSteve

    Potential Plant Sale

    are you up for shipping trees?
  9. TheSteve

    Root grafting trunk for separation to a new tree

    Are you sure you aren't confusing this reduction with foliage reduction? you shouldn't remove more than 30-50% of foliage from a juniper but I've never really heard this number aimed at the roots.
  10. TheSteve

    Juniper Present

    It's a juniper procumbens 'nana' and looks pretty healthy. you could do some thinning out, removing branches unnecessary to your vision of the tree's future up to the about the 1/3 of total foliage mark. Many go farther but it severely weakens the tree to hammer the foliage too hard.
  11. TheSteve

    Too Late For Maple Chop?

    I don't think I'd ever defoliate a lace leaf, they are too slow as it is.
  12. TheSteve

    New comer!!!!

    I'm betting it is. However, I've been wrong before, ask my wife, she's documented every instance....
  13. TheSteve

    New to bonsai, styling advice needed

    Please sir, you've just trashed my living room... what are you trying to say about my collection of the King???
  14. TheSteve

    Bending Pines

    I've spiral wrapped pines but never girdled them like this. You have a sample size of one and a control size of one. not a very persuasive argument. In theory, if you are wounding the cambium with this technique it should reflect itself in the foliage as well. your other pine have twice as many...
  15. TheSteve

    Bending Pines

    I agree with Brian. you are girdling the trunk. it will restrict flow. especially when you do it seven or eight lines along the trunk. With a spiral wrap the tree can redirect itself around the wire. can't do that with a tourniquet....
  16. TheSteve

    Bengs Spruce (Variety unidentified)

    If you look at the new growth, look at the underlying branch. It has a prickly spotted look to it. That's text book spruce right there. Mountain hemlock look nothing like this tree. totally different growth pattern and their needles are shorter and stouter, almost oval shaped. They almost look...
  17. TheSteve

    Crabapple renovation

    and now a scaffolding spammer... I've seen it all now
  18. TheSteve

    Bengs Spruce (Variety unidentified)

    You guys make this tough... first you say Oregon coast which would mean it has to be a Sitka then you say mountain hemlock (which grows in the mountains) so it must be an Englemann. Because it's definitely not a Brewer spruce and it's definitely a spruce. so once you clarify where it was...
  19. TheSteve

    Bengs Spruce (Variety unidentified)

    After looking at the pics of the needles again I'm fairly certain it's an Englemann spruce. which means it's probably Sitka.... (It's Englemann if it came out of the Oregon mountains)
  20. TheSteve

    Bengs Spruce (Variety unidentified)

    absolutely not a mountain hemlock.
  21. TheSteve

    Elm yellow leaves dropping off

    Three weeks is pretty quick for a watering issue I'd think unless there was standing water on the top of the soil constantly. It's more likely adjusting to different light levels from being moved to a new home.
  22. TheSteve

    eBay purchase...what would you do?

    you might want to move them up to 4 inch. you want them as free to grow as they can be when you do the graft.
  23. TheSteve

    Moving Have To Sell

    Been slow on posting this, but, if and when Rob has trees for sale, I highly recommend him. He delivers exactly what he promises, well packaged and protected. I bought 15 JBP seedlings from him in individual pots and they arrived not only moist and happy, but without a single grain of soil...
  24. TheSteve

    eBay purchase...what would you do?

    ok so I looked at the pictures and see weeds in the pots. so probably not recently potted....
  25. TheSteve

    eBay purchase...what would you do?

    have you tried pulling on one of the trunks to see how loose they are (or aren't)? Is it possible the they were just thrown into these pots recently for shipping?
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