Adansonia digitata #2

Kievnstavick

Shohin
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A thread dedicated to the progression of one of my A. digitata trees (aka Boabab, Upside-down, Rat-tail). This was planted on the 1st of January, 2022.

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Pictured above is the plant's progress during the winter and early spring.
 
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Kievnstavick

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Sometime between March of 2022 and July 27th, I repotted the tree. It looked like the healthy of it was in decline and I was curious to see if it was the fabled root rot. This tree did end up having some rotted tips that I ended up cutting. As this was an experiment at this point, I did not seal the root tips that I cut. I was rather exited for this tree as it was looking like a palm tree before it lost its leaves. On the 6th of September, I cut the shrunk portion as I did not think it would "revive" itself above that point.
 

Kievnstavick

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As the weather turned cold, I brought the tree inside and placed it inside of a grow tent. I performed a repot on it as I was getting annoyed at all of the smaller substrate fall out through the holes in the pond basket. I tried drywall tape this time over cheese cloth as the cheese cloth did not last the season. During the repot (on the 13th of October, 2022) I was surprised to see there were growing root tips underneath the dormant trunk. You can see that this boabab has few roots compared to my #1. 12 days later, I was surprised to see expanding buds on the trunk. I took another picture a month later to show the leaf growth. The brown dried leaf got too close to the grow light as it is on my smaller shelf (intended for germinating seeds).
 

Kievnstavick

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Showing off the one year of growth. I wired the stems/branches with two objectives in mind. Reduce the overall height of the tree to maximize the photosynthetic ability in a cramped growing area and to see how the tree responds to wiring over time. I don't plan on repotting this tree in the next winter bonsai shuffle, but I will reasses that during the summer.
 

Kievnstavick

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While inspecting my tropicals today, I noticed that the wire was really biting in. The wire was only on for a little less then a month. I'm honestly surprised on how quickly the biting got away from me.

Either way, a valuable lesson learned about wiring a baobab. The wire bites in quick, but the shapes appear to hold. Hopefully they don't slowly reset their positioning. This will also be a test case of how the wire scars heal now.
 

jason biggs

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hi Kievn the branches always reset :rolleyes: i have branches on 30 year old trees that don't hold their position at all....
wire bite is only that quick on the new dominant branches - ridiculously quick...
 

Kievnstavick

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Here is how my short stack is stacked before it finally gets to enjoy some of that great fireball in the sky. My nightly tempatures are finally staying above 55F degrees.

It is interesting to see how the apical branch repositioned itself verses the lower ones maintaining their bends (for now). This one received a minor haircut to reduce crowding a couple days ago.

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Kievnstavick

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The short-stack is slowly working its way to not being the shortest kid in class. This one did not get hurt as much from our cold start of spring for whatever reason. I only now noticed that this tree has slowly leaned to the side compared to what it looked like back in the beginning of winter 2022. I would like to keep this one on the smaller side, but that would strongly depend on how much I can reduce the leaves through ramification. If anything, it could be a winter display tree.

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hemmy

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As this was an experiment at this point, I did not seal the root tips that I cut.
I wouldn’t seal the cuts under the soil. I think it could trap water and rot. I have dusted large cuts with sulfur powder and let them dry in the sun for few days before repotting. This was prior to any bud push.
 
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