I like the look of them when they are standing alone, they grow very nicely with a full canopy.
I know the MN department of forestry did an air layer test on paper birch and had 3 out of five take.
As bonsai birch--including paper birch--aren't easy. If you want that attractive white flaky bark, you will have to grow the cutting out in the ground for a decade or so. In a pot, it is slower to appear.
If you want the white bark, starting with a tree that already has it is the way to go. The new growth on a cutting will not have it.
In bonsai cultivation, like most pioneer species, it will sucker from the base constantly, drop limbs for no reason--limbs that may have take you five years to develop.
It can make striking bonsai, but you have to put up with alot...
I love birch as well! I am trying some cuttings right now, any tips or suggestions? What was your process for getting them to grow roots?paper bich will root from a cutting =D took some at the beginning of feburary and I moved them today into a better situation than a plastic bag and they had started to root and break bud
Might have better luck starting a new thread with your questions, OP hasn’t been on the forum since 2014.I love birch as well! I am trying some cuttings right now, any tips or suggestions? What was your process for getting them to grow roots?
Hope they’re doing well!