How to Get Craggy, Textured Bark on Ficus and Schefflera

KingJades

Shohin
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I've been looking at some inspiration posts/photos of trees and noticed that some people have craggy bark on their ficus and schefflera bonsai while others have smooth, white bark.

Is there a special technique to get the craggy bark or is it just a matter of age/luck/genetics?

These are craggy and have texture and character:
DSCN2249%20005%203x4%2072dpi.jpg

ficus-nerifolia-sumo-1.jpg

20140717-000627-387042.jpg



These are white and bleached. Mostly smooth with little character:
4366692487_48f22ccc21.jpg

102%20ficus%20f.jpg

s_arbo10.jpg
 

Bonsai Nut

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Different species aside, a lot of the earlier trees have had more work done to them, and are lumpy due to healed scars.

Here's the bark on a tiger bark ficus I have that looks different from my other ficus:

tiger.jpg

Here's the bark on a 25 year-old schefflera in my landscape:

schef.jpg
 
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aphid

Mame
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On the aboricola in the first picture, repeatedly cut everything back hard annually in the summer leaving no leaves behind unless there's a new bud you want to extend. Then leave it in full sun. They'll bud back 2 to 3 buds in the end of each tip. Doing this every year will create all sorts of bumps and bends all around the tree. It's a very forgiving tree. Literally impossible to kill unless you forget to water it or leave it in the cold.

For ficuses, it's mostly genetics.
 
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