LCD35
Mame
I've never seen a corking bark variety. I have a green and varigerated green/white variety. Where did you get this?Here is a corking one.
View attachment 247066
I've never seen a corking bark variety. I have a green and varigerated green/white variety. Where did you get this?Here is a corking one.
View attachment 247066
There was a vendor selling only those at the Huntington Library (Bonzaiathon event) in CA and his story is that it is a genetic defect that occurred on one of his trees (only one/mother ship) and he keeps taking cuttings off it, grows them and sells them at bonsai events.I've never seen a corking bark variety. I have a green and varigerated green/white variety. Where did you get this?
There was a vendor selling only those at the Huntington Library (Bonzaiathon event) in CA and his story is that it is a genetic defect that occurred on one of his trees (only one/mother ship) and he keeps taking cuttings off it, grows them and sells them at bonsai events.
Would love to see a wild native somewhere .
Exactly, I knew Florida was involved in this story, Frank is the guy if anybody is interested in acquiring any of these corkers.I’m not sure of the real story, but I’ve read (below) that it originated in a Florida nursery in the ‘60s and Mr. Bogan started propagating it for bonsai. Frank Yee also propagates them and sells them at Bonsai-a-thon. The Huntington offered them in 2015 as part of the ISI sale. Weirdly, I acquired one from Bogan’s Bonsai online, then saw them offered from the Huntington and then saw Mr. Yee’s. So I have them from all 3 sources even though they are all from the same original stock and look identical.
Awesome, thanks for the info!!I’m not sure of the real story, but I’ve read (below) that it originated in a Florida nursery in the ‘60s and Mr. Bogan started propagating it for bonsai. Frank Yee also propagates them and sells them at Bonsai-a-thon. The Huntington offered them in 2015 as part of the ISI sale. Weirdly, I acquired one from Bogan’s Bonsai online, then saw them offered from the Huntington and then saw Mr. Yee’s. So I have them from all 3 sources even though they are all from the same original stock and look identical.
So they don’t grow on their own in Africa?They don’t grow on their own, they develop dense thick shrubbery that you can literally hide an elephant in, or a whole herd of elephants if you ever visit Addo National Elephant park in South Africa.
So they don’t grow on their own in Africa
No, because wherever a leaf or branch falls, it’s very likely to start growing. It’s not easy to spot a lone tree, there will always be a couple more around itSo they don’t grow on their own in Africa?
I’m not sure of the real story, but I’ve read (below) that it originated in a Florida nursery in the ‘60s and Mr. Bogan started propagating it for bonsai. Frank Yee also propagates them and sells them at Bonsai-a-thon. The Huntington offered them in 2015 as part of the ISI sale. Weirdly, I acquired one from Bogan’s Bonsai online, then saw them offered from the Huntington and then saw Mr. Yee’s. So I have them from all 3 sources even though they are all from the same original stock and look identical.
Looks good, looks like it needs to recover from the shipping trip, nice get! I don't think they wire very well, not flexible enough and will just snap.i just got a cork bark p. afra "frank". i got it off 99 cent bonsai on f.b. It came from frank Yee. i have a bunch of cuttings i am rooting. I had a hard time getting one.
Thanks, last question, was it shipped to you in a pot or you potted it when you received it?Clip and grow is how I commonly train and shape these guys. I have one branch, down low, wired. I agree it's tough to wire these guys.
Pic was taken the day of receiving it. It was priced a little high maybe but I have wanted one for some time. $150. Plus $20 for shipping