how would you get to something like this

thailand-steve

Yamadori
Messages
82
Reaction score
3
Location
Phuket, Thailand
aob_038_JUNIPERO_SAN_JOSE.jpg

i think this is very cool but not sure how to get to it. its hard to tell the size but i'm guessing about 1/2 to 3/4" in the main trunk.

clearly there is very little space for the roots so i'm guessing the roots and the trunk are pruned at the same time and a low branch is used as a leader. but i'm just not clear in the details.

also, about the deadwood part, it seems like stripping off the bark would shock the tree a lot. when and how would you do that?

here's a photoshoped version with the main tree only

aob_038_JUNIPERO_SAN_JOSEps.jpg

that's what i would like to get to
 
Last edited:

Nybonsai12

Masterpiece
Messages
3,833
Reaction score
7,680
Location
NY
USDA Zone
7a
attachment does not work for me.
 

DougB

Chumono
Messages
809
Reaction score
381
Location
Sandhills of NC
USDA Zone
8A
Re:

Hard to tell but I don't think this is a forest, separate trees. Seems to be a raft. What does someone else think?
 

jk_lewis

Masterpiece
Messages
3,817
Reaction score
1,165
Location
Western NC
USDA Zone
7-8
how would you get to something like this

Only through a LOT of work and a good deal of time.

Or, you can go out and buy it.
 

bonsai barry

Omono
Messages
1,374
Reaction score
64
Location
Cental Coast of California
USDA Zone
9
It's a very nice planting as it now stands. I'm not sure why you would try to get to the single tree. The other trees provide balance and their diminishing size suggest scale. Although the single tree you've chosen in the final photo is great, it's composition is weakened because it is exactly in the center of the rock, it would be stronger if it were off centered a bit.
 
Top Bottom