Been looking to dig one of these up for a while! Anyway, great video as usual. I like that you use common so cal material. Makes the videos more relatable than people working on 10k pines or shimpaku
I love Pyracantha, that will be my next plant purchase. I also like Cotoneaster which I have and am working on it’s development. Thanks for your videos
Great view. I was literally looking into some direction for my Pyracantha today. Request, can you do a video on Serissa? Cover anything would be helpful (pruning maintenance, cuttings, pushing more flowers, etc).
I have a question, I have a pyracantha and I'm not sure if I could cut or wire the tree without even transplant it, it still has the fruits and they still are green so I just need to know if I'm able too
Hi Jayson, I'm a beginner and I'm watching your video. About bonsai soil, what is the difference between the Akadama and kiryuzuna. Is it safe to use the kiryuzuna for bonsai.
Can I ask how much sun light do you give the tree? Is it shaded or full sun through the day? I'm in Portugal and I'm wondering where I should possition my newly acquired Pyracantha. Shade, full sun, what's best please?
I am in Italy and I have various pyracanthas around the garden and the ones in full sun are bushier. They also grow well in half shade (in fact in nature I see them often grow in the understory of open pinewoods) but I think full shade would make them lanky and weak. Cheers.
Plant it in the ground. Every year, cut around the rootball to keep the thing from sending all the feeder roots out too far from the base of the tree. It takes too long to thicken a trunk in a bonsai pot. I’m talking decades.
Nice big pyracantha! ✨
I took some pyracantha cuttings from a city-plant during a jog 2 months ago. Looking forward to growing and developing it.
Very nice Pyracantha and spot on bonsai pot for it. I have one myself, just smaller, but i really love it as a bonsai.
Been looking to dig one of these up for a while!
Anyway, great video as usual. I like that you use common so cal material. Makes the videos more relatable than people working on 10k pines or shimpaku
I love Pyracantha, that will be my next plant purchase. I also like Cotoneaster which I have and am working on it’s development.
Thanks for your videos
Cotonesater is also fantastic as bonsai. i have 3 of them in Shohin size.
Thats a awesome tree! I'd definitely love to see a video on like, A costal oak, or redwood, spruce or even a pomegranate!
Great view. I was literally looking into some direction for my Pyracantha today. Request, can you do a video on Serissa? Cover anything would be helpful (pruning maintenance, cuttings, pushing more flowers, etc).
Hermoso ejemplar de Piracanta,saludos!!!!
Nice. Jason, I think we need pruning first to open the dimension before cutting this tree.🤔
That is an awesome looking tree,.. keep up the good work,.. inspiring,...
Great video as always, thanks
I have a question, I have a pyracantha and I'm not sure if I could cut or wire the tree without even transplant it, it still has the fruits and they still are green so I just need to know if I'm able too
Hi Jayson, I'm a beginner and I'm watching your video. About bonsai soil, what is the difference between the Akadama and kiryuzuna. Is it safe to use the kiryuzuna for bonsai.
Beautiful tree mate
Have 1 request... candle pruning 5 needle pine...
I find the pyracantha is fussy root wise, how do you overcome this?
Great video!
I've read that pyracantha doesn't like repotting. How do you deal with that?
Can I ask how much sun light do you give the tree?
Is it shaded or full sun through the day?
I'm in Portugal and I'm wondering where I should possition my newly acquired Pyracantha.
Shade, full sun, what's best please?
I am in Italy and I have various pyracanthas around the garden and the ones in full sun are bushier. They also grow well in half shade (in fact in nature I see them often grow in the understory of open pinewoods) but I think full shade would make them lanky and weak. Cheers.
Hi Jason, what are your favourite techniques to thicken up the trunk of a tree?
Plant it in the ground. Every year, cut around the rootball to keep the thing from sending all the feeder roots out too far from the base of the tree. It takes too long to thicken a trunk in a bonsai pot. I’m talking decades.
Could you apply all you said re pyrocanthus to pomegranate?
What to do if pyracantha is wilting?
🌳🌲👍🏼
you make it look to easy
1st