p_anova
Mame
Hmmmmm. Same thing happened to mine. Did a repot early Spring and didn't mess with the roots too much. Dead dead dead.
Sorry to hear that bro . You had me interested in it’s development . It’s to cold heat for JBP . Or at least for my winter storage ability . So a hybrid with some of JBP traits seemed promisingRest In peace, JRP ‘Jane Kluis’. You had a lot of potential but just didn’t thrive after your first repotting.
I’m the opposite. I want to get trees out of nursery soil mixes and into APL as soon as it is practical to do so because I want watering to be as predictable as possible. I find that trees in nursery soil often have large dead zones underneath the trunk and you won’t know it until you repot. Usually, that approach works well for me. In this case, I think I just needed to go with a deeper pot and get down to a true bonsai container at a later repotting.I have learned the hard way . Nursery stock purchases I leave Ithrm in There container and soil . Condition them to my yard and care . Get them fertilized well and growing healthy. Confirm there is no left over health concerns . Then repot the next spring . It sounds un necessary in a lot of cases and maybe just helps my peace of mind . But the vigor with out a doubt helps
Traditional I agree with your logic . What changed my approach . Is the end of spring sale trees . Thought we’ll it’s late and a little risky to repot . But by next spring the trees are in great shape . Most likely the heavy fertilizer regime is biggest cause . After all nursery is in the sales business fert cost money . O I still pot stuff right away like you . But valuable material questionable health stuff and under developed I often leave . . Just mentioned it as a option . Significant health can be induced And in the long run you have not slowed the transition to bonsai . My climate having a small reporting season also has played a factorI’m the opposite. I want to get trees out of nursery soil mixes and into APL as soon as it is practical to do so because I want watering to be as predictable as possible. I find that trees in nursery soil often have large dead zones underneath the trunk and you won’t know it until you repot. Usually, that approach works well for me. In this case, I think I just needed to go with a deeper pot and get down to a true bonsai container at a later repotting.
I agree.I’m the opposite. I want to get trees out of nursery soil mixes and into APL as soon as it is practical
I've had nursery trees that I didn't do any work on that nonetheless died in their first winter because our fall and winter here is too wet when combined with nursery soil mix. The nurseries can overwinter their trees just fine because they move them indoors in a cold frame, hoop house, greenhouse, or whatever and that reduces the cold temperatures they're exposed to and also controls moisture levels. I lack those facilities. It's either mulched in on the north side of the house or garage or indoors in the basement under lights (where space is very limited, so I only bring in tropicals, subtropicals, and a couple special trees that won't thrive outdoors in my zone - coastal redwood and giant sequoia).Traditional I agree with your logic . What changed my approach . Is the end of spring sale trees . Thought we’ll it’s late and a little risky to repot . But by next spring the trees are in great shape . Most likely the heavy fertilizer regime is biggest cause . After all nursery is in the sales business fert cost money . O I still pot stuff right away like you . But valuable material questionable health stuff and under developed I often leave . . Just mentioned it as a option . Significant health can be induced And in the long run you have not slowed the transition to bonsai . My climate having a small reporting season also has played a factor
I already do that. I don't bare root conifers except in some limited circumstances, such as when creating a root over rock composition.You could try doing half bare root on nursery material. That would reduce water retention of the nursery soil by 50% and help with your wet/cold winters.