I love Peter's soothing, calm voice. I finally found another voice that sounds like his; it's a Canadian documentary called "Broke" they sound like brothers!
I just want to say thank you Mr. Chan for helping me find a new hobby. I've watched more hours of these than I care to admit and I'm really looking to getting started even though its late in the season :)
Peter, you are truly the world champion of air-layering ! I have not seen anyone else in bonsai or agriculture ever do so many air-layerings and that too across multiple species ! I have added this video also to my playlist "Air layering = Instant trees"
i love to see the root system for a while that the reason i always took a many pics and videos for watch them later more and more ... also i did it too many successful air layers this year on my bougaivillea and hibiscus family and brugmansia collection with your nice and easy method .... already i have many mature plants more than 50 that i made it this year .. no room for walking in my garden ... i wanna say thank you again Mr.peter chan .... thank you for every things that you teach us for free ... your TH-cam channel is like a great university with tons of deep knowledge that every body can get it
That was very exciting to see all those air layering take So crazy to see all of the roots grown from moss. Thank you for showing us this video. And you are never boring. ☺☺☺☺💓💓💓💓
Thank you Peter for another lovely video. Absolutely, a revelation, seeing all those air layerings. I expect everyone watching this wishes that we could be as expert, I am,just amazing!
Mr. Chen your enthusiasm is contagious and it is always a pleasure to see your videos, I have propagated my trident maple that you gave me advice repotting over video call and I think I have around 50 new plants (the size of a match) and I can say the the inspiration you have gifted me over this 17 months of pandemic is priceless Giuliano from Verona
This is a wonderful video which you should watch all the way through, but I will say that you'll get an amazing level of wisdom from the last 2-3 minutes (provided you watch everything up to that point), more than a hundred other videos might provide. Thank you, Peter and Josh.
I love watching your videos Peter. I could listen to you all day long. You are very inspiring and I have learned a lot from you. We are planning to visit in the summer🥰
like a kid in a candy store, your joy is palpable. thanks as always, for sharing these skills with us. I am harvesting 4 in the wild and purchased 2 small firs to form 6 this fall in hypertufa pots Ive made, trying air layering next spring and summer ... looking forward to this joy when harvesting the air layered trunks.
PETER and CREW,, good morning! thank you for the tips i love air--layering because you always get a instant tree and not have that long wait to get the same size tree
Nice air-layering harvest. Will love to see the twin trunk tree at the end of your video coming spring to see the roots it will produce. I wonder if adding some more moss will help. Thanks for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for the video! I would love to see the next step, i. e. how to deal with the roots that now grow in the deep flower-pots to make them bonsai-worthy
Great video Peter. These type are my favourite to watch. Had some success in air layering my maples this year after watching your previous videos on air layering. Keep up the good work with the videos and sharing your wisdom.
Thanks for the video Peter. I have a small (35/40 cm) Antarctic Beech Bonsai. There seems to be very little information on these as bonsai, so it would be much appreciated if you could show the follow up work on these when appropriate. Thanks again.
Dear Mr. Chan and Dear Staff, could you maybe show an update on the airlayering on that last huge maple? It was first shown in late 2020 in the maple series, I believe it was part IV, and I am still so curious to see if it was a success and how the bonsai turned out. Wishing you all the best! Dominique
The moss gives the roots a place to make fine feeder roots. There is a lot of surface area in the moss. The hairy section of the roots is where water and nutrients are absorbed, at least 80%. The feeder roots are small and hair like. They do not grow with as much force as seeker roots, the longest medium thick roots, which can be cut off. You can regenerate a tree quickly by letting it get fine feeder roots, and then understanding how to feed the tree what it needs. After it gets healthy, it needs to be anchored better, hence the slightly compacted soil. That space isn't for feeding, the space in the moss with the fine roots, will still do that just fine.
@@Robert_McGarry_Poems Well, that's a great theory but I think that in wet climates such mix would hold too much moisture and in conseqence kill roots. I personally mix pumice and spaghnum to make sure that roots are doing fine. (edit: Peter used something much better than just ordinary soil :D)
I don't know if Peter would check the comments for a video this old, but could someone explain why the relatively root-bound moss ball is planted straight into soil? Why would one not want to loosen the roots up a bit first?
I have a Trident Maple, that I am still trying to figure out what to do with, BUT....I had chopped the top of one of the trunks, ( it has three trunks, that separate after about 3 inches of a single trunk ) The chopped top was about 1/2" in diameter, with many small branches that was a sort of an apex on that particular trunk, and I used some hormone, cut almost all the small branches back, and planted it in a small seedling pot with some regular compost just to see if it would strike, and it has filled the small pot with roots, and has dozens and dozens of leaves. I have already moved it to a slightly larger, deeper pot, and its growing at a feverish pace. I would never had thought that Tridents were difficult. Perhaps air layering is more difficult, but my cuttings seem to be much more easy to get started. This is in fact, one of three I've gotten to shoot leaves just from small branch cuttings...That little Trident top that is absolutely gorgeous with all its little leaves is indeed, very exciting for me...
Dear Peter, I eventually found that Hippophae (sea buckthorn) tends to air layering. This observation I did after removing the wide rubber stip from a branch. Although I didn’t make the bark cuttings I found a lot of small roots which grew in wet media under rubber strip. Sea buckthorn is the tree naturally growing in UK, having small leaves an interesting bark. I wonder if you have sea buckthorn’s in your nursery. Otherwise it may be an interesting idea to introduce this species to your collection. They have male and female flowers on different trees which is point relevant for fruiting.
Thank you for all of your videos. I'm just getting started. My question is after you air layer and then after the roots grow and you transfer into a flower pot, when do you put it into a bonsai pot?
Ik this is months ago, but I have been watching so many of your videos since you're so far the only youtuber that has so much knowledge about bonsai. 😊 can you demonstrate a small bonsai with ivy?? English ivy or something of the sort??
I love everything about this theme! Can someone say me what kind of moss Peter take for the airlayering: fresh moss so peat moss? My Garden ist full of fresh moss … Best Regards, Jan
Absolutely love all your videos, Peter. Just one question though, and open to anyone else too... If cuttings work, then why does air layering exist? Thanks
I didn't know to pot the air-layering at first sitting in some water. Then repot in a bit larger pot and the tree should soon be established before Winter.
Mr Chan, would it be alright for me to chop a Norway Maple air layering from the tree, in the middle of winter? I know it's not ideal, but I have to move house soon. You're a great inspiration to me, thank you!
No matter what the weather Herons Bonsai is heaven on earth. Thank you Peter.
After all bonsai is all about patience..thats the wisdom coming from the master..always wonderful thoughts to ponder. cheers!
I love how excited Peter gets with successful air layerings! :)
Fabulous video, always like how Mr Chan give credit to his staff for their hard work too.
Josh, you make Peter and plants importantly, very happy.🙃
Honestly I love seeing the trees and the gardening, but the best part about all of this is how excited Peter is 😄
Glad to see the owner was smiling😊 one happy customer🌿👍
Mr Peter chan sir you truly are the masters
And you so humble too
Thanks you all at Herron bonsai
What a great lesson on patience at the end there. Good one Peter!
I love Peter's soothing, calm voice. I finally found another voice that sounds like his; it's a Canadian documentary called "Broke" they sound like brothers!
Before I research, what's the subject with broke? Pete's in possession of a lovely voice, calming and informative sometimes ego but its all good
Thank you - that's nice to know because I dont like the sound of my own voice.
Give Josh a raise :-) Fantastic success rate. Thanks, keep growing
I just want to say thank you Mr. Chan for helping me find a new hobby.
I've watched more hours of these than I care to admit and I'm really looking to getting started even though its late in the season :)
I like seeing you so happy Peter. Airlaying maples, what's not to be happy about. Great success rate.
Peter, you are truly the world champion of air-layering ! I have not seen anyone else in bonsai or agriculture ever do so many air-layerings and that too across multiple species !
I have added this video also to my playlist "Air layering = Instant trees"
i love to see the root system for a while that the reason i always took a many pics and videos for watch them later more and more ... also i did it too many successful air layers this year on my bougaivillea and hibiscus family and brugmansia collection with your nice and easy method .... already i have many mature plants more than 50 that i made it this year .. no room for walking in my garden ... i wanna say thank you again Mr.peter chan .... thank you for every things that you teach us for free ... your TH-cam channel is like a great university with tons of deep knowledge that every body can get it
That was very exciting to see all those air layering take So crazy to see all of the roots grown from moss. Thank you for showing us this video. And you are never boring. ☺☺☺☺💓💓💓💓
Just started watching, Peter is a wonderful teacher and I find it very interesting.
I love when people are enthusiastic about something that most people wouldn't give a second look.
I love watching you happy and excited, Peter :) Thanks for sharing!
Peter once again you have succeeded, you are truly an amazing person 🇬🇧😊❤️
What an exciting video! Roots everywhere we look! Absolutely love this video, thanks Peter! 👏👏
Patience. I'm still waiting on my air-layerings. Your last illustration gave me hope. I will wait. Thank you.
Thank you Peter for another lovely video. Absolutely, a revelation, seeing all those air layerings. I expect everyone watching this wishes that we could be as expert, I am,just amazing!
You are the best Peter, love your air laying videos
Peter you are really a fine and inspiring person.
Thanks so much for the tips and tricks, I have four new maples now using your methods! Success!
Your videos always make my day Peter. Bless you !
The great master peter. I love it.
I love the excitement in this video! Thank you for sharing!
Thank you Peter, Thank you Josh!
Mr. Chen your enthusiasm is contagious and it is always a pleasure to see your videos, I have propagated my trident maple that you gave me advice repotting over video call and I think I have around 50 new plants (the size of a match) and I can say the the inspiration you have gifted me over this 17 months of pandemic is priceless Giuliano from Verona
Thank-you, Peter, for another very interesting, informative video! Please, keep them coming!
Always a pleasure. Thank you for sharing all your tricks and wisedom. Made airlaying this year with your guide and technic and it was succesful. 😁👍🏼
Hi Peter, thank to you I have already successfully air layering large branch from a trident maple thank you for all the videos
I love Peter’s excitement over the successful air layers!!! ❤️
This is a wonderful video which you should watch all the way through, but I will say that you'll get an amazing level of wisdom from the last 2-3 minutes (provided you watch everything up to that point), more than a hundred other videos might provide. Thank you, Peter and Josh.
Mr CHAN I love your videos. I learned a tons from you thank you very much for all your knowledge your share with us. ❤
Amazinly informative! ... as always. Thank you so much for this wonderfully learning packed video.
Thanks Peter!! I’ve just harvested my first air layerings after watching your videos. Thank you so much for your guidance!! Fingers crossed they work
Great video Peter. I love to see these type of videos. Keep up the good work with the videos and sharing your wisdom and tips.
Congratulations Josh and Peter! It's always exciting to see the good fruits of our Lord and the work of our labor!
AMEN ! ✝️
I love how Peter is wearing one green boot and one black boot!
Whoaa...what a fun day 😘Sphagnum Moss equals to fast growing healthy roots indeed. Well done Peter 👍, and thx for sharing, until next one, cheers. 🙏
Nice root systems and marvelous trunks on the air layering tree branches.
Thank you for dispelling the misteries of air layering. 🎉
Wonderful video sir so much insight a real expert.thank you a fan from USA.
This made my day(once more), really enjoyable!
i love what you do Peter!
I love watching your videos Peter. I could listen to you all day long. You are very inspiring and I have learned a lot from you. We are planning to visit in the summer🥰
I too successfully air layered my first trident maple 2 weeks back here in india after watching all your videos
This man is a true gem
like a kid in a candy store, your joy is palpable. thanks as always, for sharing these skills with us. I am harvesting 4 in the wild and purchased 2 small firs to form 6 this fall in hypertufa pots Ive made, trying air layering next spring and summer ... looking forward to this joy when harvesting the air layered trunks.
Thank you for sharing all these knowledge. I love your channel.
Spring here in NZ,, love this time of year as my Maples burst into leaf.
Always such great videos
Till now that is my Favorit Video
Nice sharing video...👏👏👏
Love seeing the progress 🤩
Really enjoyed watching, and learning new things!
Top stuff - thank you and regards from South Africa
Excellent video Peter....Thank you!!!
When your videos pop up, i always look for it
PETER and CREW,, good morning! thank you for the tips i love air--layering because you always get a instant tree and not have that long wait to get the same size tree
Excellent video! Thanks for fixing the audio. Sounds much better.
I stopped using the external mike altogether.
Mr Chan, the winters coming- you should buy a thick jacket with hawaiin patterns on it. If that exists.
I will have to visit the charity shop soon.
Great video on air layering Peter... i didnt realise you could re use spagnum moss again on another tree.. awesome!
Nice air-layering harvest. Will love to see the twin trunk tree at the end of your video coming spring to see the roots it will produce. I wonder if adding some more moss will help. Thanks for sharing this video.
Well done Josh.
Infectiously enthusiastic :)
Peter: “I won’t bore you.”
All of us: 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Mr Peter chan you could never bore us
I think you agree L👍👍👍
very good to see how I can do this, thanks greetz from Belguim 💚
Thank you so much for the video! I would love to see the next step, i. e. how to deal with the roots that now grow in the deep flower-pots to make them bonsai-worthy
Wonderful propagation!
8:47 pot noodles 😉
😆
Thank you.... 🙏 😔 🙏
Dr. Chan, I always learn something or have something re-enforced from long years ago,,,, once more,,,
THANK YOU 🙏 😔 🙏....
🙏 🖖 🙏
Wednesday Morning Bonsai Breakfast Club 😊
Ha! And you got there first!! 👍🏻
@@BlueSkyBonsai too much free time 😆
@@TheBonsaiGarden I'm watching it while pretending to read my emails!
Great video Peter. These type are my favourite to watch. Had some success in air layering my maples this year after watching your previous videos on air layering. Keep up the good work with the videos and sharing your wisdom.
word hier helemaal blij van :)
You make it look easy. Thanks for sharing and giving some great ideas and insight into bonsai. Awesome Peter 👍TrickyTrev 🇦🇺👍🐝🍯🌲
Great thanks sir providing such a valueable information.....Ali from... Kashmir
Good info. I may try this with my fig air layers.
Thanks for the video Peter. I have a small (35/40 cm) Antarctic Beech Bonsai. There seems to be very little information on these as bonsai, so it would be much appreciated if you could show the follow up work on these when appropriate. Thanks again.
Dear Mr. Chan and Dear Staff, could you maybe show an update on the airlayering on that last huge maple? It was first shown in late 2020 in the maple series, I believe it was part IV, and I am still so curious to see if it was a success and how the bonsai turned out. Wishing you all the best! Dominique
The tray of water certainly seems to work. Will have to try this next year.
Ordinary soil and spaghnum is a strange mix but it's also interesting at the same time haha, thank you for sharing this method Peter!
The moss gives the roots a place to make fine feeder roots. There is a lot of surface area in the moss. The hairy section of the roots is where water and nutrients are absorbed, at least 80%. The feeder roots are small and hair like. They do not grow with as much force as seeker roots, the longest medium thick roots, which can be cut off.
You can regenerate a tree quickly by letting it get fine feeder roots, and then understanding how to feed the tree what it needs. After it gets healthy, it needs to be anchored better, hence the slightly compacted soil. That space isn't for feeding, the space in the moss with the fine roots, will still do that just fine.
@@Robert_McGarry_Poems Well, that's a great theory but I think that in wet climates such mix would hold too much moisture and in conseqence kill roots. I personally mix pumice and spaghnum to make sure that roots are doing fine. (edit: Peter used something much better than just ordinary soil :D)
I don't know if Peter would check the comments for a video this old, but could someone explain why the relatively root-bound moss ball is planted straight into soil? Why would one not want to loosen the roots up a bit first?
Потрясающий результат за столь короткое время.
Great! Is there a video showing the start of the process?
THANK YOU!
Wow its amazing how much and how fast those roots grew
I have a Trident Maple, that I am still trying to figure out what to do with, BUT....I had chopped the top of one of the trunks, ( it has three trunks, that separate after about 3 inches of a single trunk ) The chopped top was about 1/2" in diameter, with many small branches that was a sort of an apex on that particular trunk, and I used some hormone, cut almost all the small branches back, and planted it in a small seedling pot with some regular compost just to see if it would strike, and it has filled the small pot with roots, and has dozens and dozens of leaves. I have already moved it to a slightly larger, deeper pot, and its growing at a feverish pace. I would never had thought that Tridents were difficult. Perhaps air layering is more difficult, but my cuttings seem to be much more easy to get started. This is in fact, one of three I've gotten to shoot leaves just from small branch cuttings...That little Trident top that is absolutely gorgeous with all its little leaves is indeed, very exciting for me...
Sounds wonderful
I used a small nursery pot and bonsai soil to airlayer my trident and it worked well
Next time I try growing a trident I guess I'll be looking for cuttings or layerings, had absolutely terrible luck growing them from seed.
Awesome! Thank you💕🙏🏼🌻
Peter, merhaba. Türkiyeden yazıyorum. Çok başarılı sunum yapıyorsun, tebrikler.
Dear Peter, I eventually found that Hippophae (sea buckthorn) tends to air layering. This observation I did after removing the wide rubber stip from a branch. Although I didn’t make the bark cuttings I found a lot of small roots which grew in wet media under rubber strip. Sea buckthorn is the tree naturally growing in UK, having small leaves an interesting bark. I wonder if you have sea buckthorn’s in your nursery. Otherwise it may be an interesting idea to introduce this species to your collection. They have male and female flowers on different trees which is point relevant for fruiting.
Thank you for all of your videos. I'm just getting started. My question is after you air layer and then after the roots grow and you transfer into a flower pot, when do you put it into a bonsai pot?
Ik this is months ago, but I have been watching so many of your videos since you're so far the only youtuber that has so much knowledge about bonsai. 😊 can you demonstrate a small bonsai with ivy?? English ivy or something of the sort??
I love everything about this theme!
Can someone say me what kind of moss Peter take for the airlayering: fresh moss so peat moss?
My Garden ist full of fresh moss …
Best Regards, Jan
Great!!! Thanks, Greetings !
Absolutely love all your videos, Peter.
Just one question though, and open to anyone else too...
If cuttings work, then why does air layering exist?
Thanks
I didn't know to pot the air-layering at first sitting in some water. Then repot in a bit larger pot and the tree should soon be established before Winter.
Mr Chan, would it be alright for me to chop a Norway Maple air layering from the tree, in the middle of winter? I know it's not ideal, but I have to move house soon.
You're a great inspiration to me, thank you!
I wouldn't normally do that but if you have no choice - then do it.