The agony of not being able to sleep turns into the ecstasy of one and a half hours of Bonsai demonstrations. I don’t understand why you leave such heavy roots and don’t seem concerned with having fresh soil topped up. I am so inspired watching I can hardly wait for morning light to get out and work on my own bonsai.
I literally watched a video of yours and bought a juniper sapling. I gussied it up with moss, rocks, other plants and pruned it. It looks so good that my roommate thought I bought a bonsai.
Peter, I love these relaxed long videos where you are alone with us, working on trees in the evening. It’s so interesting to watch the flow of your work and to see the transformation unfolding in front of us! ❤️
I took up Bonsai just last year during lockdown. I suffer from depression, this calm gentle hobby has helped a lot. Visited Herons about 6 years again. Hope I can visit again soon now that my interest has grown. Love watching these videos. I could listen to Peter all day long. He does make me laugh at times, lovely skill to have. Brilliant artist.
I really appreciate how you explain everything. Even when you talk about other subjects. So if anyone says you talk to much or are boring...they can go somewhere else. You are an inspiration and a great teacher! Thank you
I always love the birdsongs in the background of your videos, Peter. Bless you for providing sanctuary for the birds, as well as your love of trees and bonsai knowledge and sharing of your skills!!!
I just became aware of your videos and I absolutely adore them. I have always loved bonsai trees. 53 years old I figured it is time to grow one myself.
Peter such a value to the bonsai community because he has trees that he’s been caring for for upwards of 30 years and some that are 65 -70yrs old , so it’s terrific to get to see them down the line because with bonsai everything is in the future so it’s kind of hard to visualize these things. This is just one of many reasons why I appreciate Peter so much.
A walk through in your garden, along with your wise words, tips and experiences...makes feel as if m taking a stroll with you in the garden...you have been a GREAT Inspiration Sir!
Many times I watch you to learn, sometimes just for the pleasure of watching you create, like this one. Thanks for teaching and entertaining us. You have a special gift.
As a rookie (raw amateur) to this beautiful art form, I want to thank you for sharing the incredible wealth of knowledge and artistic genius you've acquired over the years.
Hello Peter, here's once again a bit of information on trees: Deciduous trees grow new shoots gradually each year, whereas conifers grow the entire shoot once, but expand that growth throughout the year. That's the reason why the green cones are probably not cones, but juvenile new growth! This is also the reason why, if you prune the 'candles' , you shorten it's growth :) Hope I've made everyone's day a bit more smarter!
When Peter told us of the Ezo forest stolen in 1990, I felt bad. A minute later, I realized I was feeling more sorry for the trees than for Peter, because they lost the chance to be sublimely beautiful.
Yes, I hope you enjoyed it. I did enjoy it--immensely. Even though I will never create a bonsai, watching these beautiful videos fills me with delight and admiration. Thank you for sharing your useful afternoon with us.
I laughed when you said your wife said you didn't need anymore plants. My husband says that all the time! Lol! Luckily, I have alot of maple seedlings that grow from seed all around my gardens. It's the end of August now here in Michigan in the U.S.A. It was a really hot summer so I lost one or two of my baby trees, but most are still going along ok. Thank you for your vids and showing us amateurs how to work with these beauties.
I was so sad when you said some of your trees got stolen! I cant believe someone would do that to someone so sweet :( If you have pictures of them, you should post them, you have enough followers that everyone could look out for them for you! I took your advice... well sort of, I am still trying to grow bonsai from seeds, but I went out and bought a few little trees that I am going to try and make bonsai out of! It's so much fun! I bought my hubby a 3D printer to make me bonsai pots! So now we are both doing bonsai as well as my daughter who has about 30 little seedlings. Thank you so much and bless you and yours.
well, of course they get stolen, some of these art worth 1000s if not 10000s. that's why especially in japan these bonsai nurseries have very heavy gated areas and surveillance all over the place before you enter
Both observations are true enough. However, for the lay person, it is most likely very difficult to make much money, even with exceptional pieces. So, it ends up being unfortunate more than anything...😭 This happened to a bonsai museum near me. People stole priceless pieces, but then realized the those who would pay what they were worth knew they were stolen. They came back, almost dead...😣 Hopefully, they live.
Thank you Mr. Chan, and all who contribute to these wonderful videos. In the UK there is a place called Eggleston Hall Gardens, they have a wide variety of unusual, beautiful conifers; I wouldn't mention it, but they are not in competition with Herons, as they do not produce bonsai, and you said it was difficult to find interesting conifers.
Hi! I am subscribed to your TH-cam channel for almost a year now and I am already doing bonsai.I find your videos really good. While viewing your video on making a bonsai from Christmas tree, and I just want to mention that here in Québec and all around Canada we use the Balsam fir as Christmas tree. Balsam fir has flat non stinging nettles. Thanks.
Greetings from Baltimore...I save honeybees as you save and collect trees...I can't say no to making sure bees have a chance to thrive. Many thanks for your relaxing and informative videos. If I could ask for another ficus tutorial? I have a tree my wife and I bought 25 years ago and would like to make it more like bonsai...THANK YOU PETER!!!
I know. l'm loving this channel. He has so much experience and has given me so much confidence with my plants! I almost feel like my bonsai know he's teaching me, haha.
dear sir, we can't get enough of your amazingly relaxing and informative videos !! you are an amazing teacher and we can't thank you enough for your blessings !
Thank you.... 🙏 😔 🙏 Dr. Chan another wonderous video, showing that any plant can be made into a Bonsai. Thank you for educating us in the art of Bonsai. As always there is so much knowledge and information that you share. Once again, thank you. I am watching this just before Christmas and there are always quite a few "Christmas trees" that are in the trash and each year I rescue a few and add them to my collection. They make wonderful bonsais and grow well here. You have given me some new ideas, as usual. 🎄🙏 🖖 🙏 😔 🙏 🙏 🙏 🎄
I'm new to Bonsai myself. These videos and knowledge is fantastic to someone like me who is just getting into the art of keeping Bonsai. Great information and the tutorials are amazing to watch, so helpful, yet also very relaxing.
I discovered your awesome videos yesterday, in the afternoon, and since then I'm watching them. I was wondering if you can provide some tips regarding a lemon/ citrus trees. You have my most sincere appreciation for your entire contribution, on this subject!!🙏👏👏
Words of Wisdom from Peter. 30:2131:1033:05 and 1:20:59 some really excellent insight and suggestions. Thankyou very much for this very informative video. Stay safe.
Could you do a video on making apex (crowns) on different kinds of trees? Like on deciduous trees, pines, larches, yews and maybe if it matters how to adjust the apex on the style of tree. Formal upright, informal, casquade, ect.
Thank you for the videos I've been doing bonsai for about 10 years, and absolutely love the hobby. Your videos have helped alot. I only have one bonsai that is from a nursery.
thank you for continuing to share your knowledge and experience so generously. I'm left inspired after each one of your videos. your no nonsense approach, sense of humor and 'simplicity' in approach belies your great depth and knowledge of the art form that is bonsai. much appreciated.
I was so sad about those plants that got stolen! I can't imagine they had a great life. At least he got to harvest cutlings (cut-lings?) from those trees so they technically are still living on. My mom had a big Jade plant I have always loved growing up. When I moved out I took a branch of that Jade with me, the mother plant died in a flood, but I still have my cutling, which is now almost as big as the mother plant was 10 years ago. Plants are simply amazing.
Beautiful work, beautiful trees I have to say mr. chan. I started watching your channel about a year ago and I have learned so much from you. It's about time to give you a big and sincere thank you for all that you have taught me. Not only facts but ways of thinking. Thank you very much. If I ever get the opportunity I will pay you and all you plants a visit. Greetingz from Germany, stay save. :)
I am not a big fan of those Latin scientific names but now I will surely try because I just learned what 'glauca' means. Thank you Peter. Your such a good teacher. All the three trees are beautiful but the weeping spruce literati is my favourite. I know you are self videoing and having difficulty but please don't stop teaching.
I love watching you in action Peter, you make it look so easy! The second one you did turned out nice but I would of liked to see your "drastic" rendition. I love a challenge! The weeping one was unique, I would have just enjoyed its gentle grace as it wept! I hope you can instruct for many more years to come. Thank you.
A couple thoughts on identification: the first spruce you are calling Picea pungens 'Globosa' is more likely Picea bicolor (possibly a variety like 'Howell's Dwarf', with the shorter blunter needles that are blue on one side and green on the other and bright purple cones. Pungens has much longer sharper needles and dusky rose color to the new cones. There is another spruce with two colored needles called Picea omorika, but it also tends to have longer needles. The third tree you worked on does look like a pungens.
That was what my wife kept saying to me and still says, "why another plant??" I will tell you that in 105 to 115 degree weather it takes a toll on everything. I have to water every single Night to keep things living. I expect to water my Bonsai every night, but all plants every night? Having to water at night when it hits 90 degrees or the water doesn't seem to absorb well into the plant. Or maybe its just me thinking it doesn't. Decided to get that book by Mr. Harrison, so I got lucky and found a hard back on Amazon!!! Thank you Sir for the information. Love the birds, miss the East Coast birds of the Mountains in the USA. I now being in the deserts of Arizona. Always looking for the character of the curve. Lady at a nursery I visit saying oh this is a better plant, it is growing straight, I said it is nice, but has no character, I'll take this curvy one.
I hope you know how phenomenal you are. I am watching TH-cam after TH-cam of your craft/hobby ...inspiring...I live in an apartment...now where to gather trees. You are magnificent.
I love you man, you are so thoughtful with us showing us up close with camera where your going to make the cut (the view is worth a hundred words for sure in my case. This is by far feels like I am right in the instruction room with Peter Chan. It is not inconvenient for you to do all these small things (that are huge for me). And when you say "and how easy is that" make me smile? Your right about going to a nursery and what one needs is not what one finds but the fashionable . I'm going to ask my brother if he could find me a small spruce in the Northern Ontario woods (lots of spruce forest there) wrap it well and send it to me. I'm not sure if he will think its a good idea. The finished Picea is stunning. I'm inspired. Many thanks
I love your videos and especially your beautiful voice and vocabulary. I live on the ocean in Ucluelet, British Columbia and I have questions about making massive Katsura bonsai, in a very large container I have over 60 seedlings. I wonder if anyone has ever done a forest this size?
Thank you so much, Peter! Since becoming enamored with Bonsai recently, you've become my teacher. I try to fit in at least one video a day! Again, THANKS!
Fantastic job! I hope to have an amazing collection like yourself one day! My bonsais are lacking but I’ll use your methods and hope mine turn out as nice as yours one day!!
Hi there I enjoyed watching had a great time the trees came out quite well you do such a good job on them thank you so much for making these vedios takes care
@Norwegian Spruce merrier is another word for happier. More the merrier is an old saying that rolls off the tounge. It's usually used when talking about people company, but it can be used wherever we please as well :)
Even just found a beautiful hinoki. Its so nice I couldn't bring myself to trim much. I mosty just plucked the growth between its natural pads to empathize its already beautiful growth. I usually butcher most nursery stock as a side note. Yet it looks like full grown tree as is. So I am ecstatic with it. Yes its considered a false cypress but ya..
Thank you Bodie for your tireless work in editing and managing youtube! Funny the a spruce video came up. I was just looking on street view at my childhood home where, some 50 years ago and before I was born, my Father planted two Picea Glauca (not pendula) pretty close to the road. Throughout my childhood they were maybe 12-15 feet tall and had started really filling out in width as well. I always really loved that unique blue color! Well, now there is just one and looks surely 40-50 feet tall. Alas it must have some disease or some other unfortunate condition as it is rather bedraggled looking and now appears much less blue. Ahh well, never can tell what will happen to a tree over time.
Loving this tutorial. Thank you Peter. I'm hooked. Three bonsai already and a jacaranda, recent acquisition, that I'm in awe of. Hope I can keep it alive!
I am pretty sure you are mistaken about the Picea Pungens Glauca Pendula. To me it looks like a Picea Abies Acrocona. I have one in my garden and it has very similar growth to the specimen in your garden. Also gets small red cones in the spring at the end of the new shoots. And great work on all three trees. Btw there are some really good conifers nurseries stil in the UK with 1000 of plants and they ship.
The agony of not being able to sleep turns into the ecstasy of one and a half hours of Bonsai demonstrations. I don’t understand why you leave such heavy roots and don’t seem concerned with having fresh soil topped up. I am so inspired watching I can hardly wait for morning light to get out and work on my own bonsai.
Exactly
“I hoped you enjoyed it” OF course we have, you’re an amazing teacher and artist. Thank you so much for these videos and giving us your time.
I love listening to the birds in the background while watching your demo.
Really happy birds not planes. 💕
I literally watched a video of yours and bought a juniper sapling. I gussied it up with moss, rocks, other plants and pruned it. It looks so good that my roommate thought I bought a bonsai.
Im amazed how he can remember what year he bought each plants/trees. Warm greetings from Southern California.
Plants and trees are like our children and we have a way of remembering when they first come into our lives.
Peter, I love these relaxed long videos where you are alone with us, working on trees in the evening. It’s so interesting to watch the flow of your work and to see the transformation unfolding in front of us! ❤️
I took up Bonsai just last year during lockdown. I suffer from depression, this calm gentle hobby has helped a lot. Visited Herons about 6 years again. Hope I can visit again soon now that my interest has grown. Love watching these videos. I could listen to Peter all day long. He does make me laugh at times, lovely skill to have. Brilliant artist.
I really appreciate how you explain everything. Even when you talk about other subjects. So if anyone says you talk to much or are boring...they can go somewhere else. You are an inspiration and a great teacher! Thank you
I always love the birdsongs in the background of your videos, Peter. Bless you for providing sanctuary for the birds, as well as your love of trees and bonsai knowledge and sharing of your skills!!!
I just became aware of your videos and I absolutely adore them. I have always loved bonsai trees. 53 years old I figured it is time to grow one myself.
Peter such a value to the bonsai community because he has trees that he’s been caring for for upwards of 30 years and some that are 65 -70yrs old , so it’s terrific to get to see them down the line because with bonsai everything is in the future so it’s kind of hard to visualize these things. This is just one of many reasons why I appreciate Peter so much.
A walk through in your garden, along with your wise words, tips and experiences...makes feel as if m taking a stroll with you in the garden...you have been a GREAT Inspiration Sir!
Many times I watch you to learn, sometimes just for the pleasure of watching you create, like this one.
Thanks for teaching and entertaining us. You have a special gift.
As a rookie (raw amateur) to this beautiful art form, I want to thank you for sharing the incredible wealth of knowledge and artistic genius you've acquired over the years.
Hello Peter, here's once again a bit of information on trees: Deciduous trees grow new shoots gradually each year, whereas conifers grow the entire shoot once, but expand that growth throughout the year. That's the reason why the green cones are probably not cones, but juvenile new growth! This is also the reason why, if you prune the 'candles' , you shorten it's growth :) Hope I've made everyone's day a bit more smarter!
Thank you - I learn something new from you today !!
@@peterchan3100 Ýou are more than welcome, I am glad I can give back for what I receive from you(r channel)!
Patience humility longevity all needed for such a tree....
When Peter told us of the Ezo forest stolen in 1990, I felt bad. A minute later, I realized I was feeling more sorry for the trees than for Peter, because they lost the chance to be sublimely beautiful.
Yes, I hope you enjoyed it. I did enjoy it--immensely. Even though I will never create a bonsai, watching these beautiful videos fills me with delight and admiration. Thank you for sharing your useful afternoon with us.
I love going back and watching Peter's video's again. Over and over they are inspiring.
I laughed when you said your wife said you didn't need anymore plants. My husband says that all the time! Lol! Luckily, I have alot of maple seedlings that grow from seed all around my gardens. It's the end of August now here in Michigan in the U.S.A. It was a really hot summer so I lost one or two of my baby trees, but most are still going along ok. Thank you for your vids and showing us amateurs how to work with these beauties.
I was so sad when you said some of your trees got stolen! I cant believe someone would do that to someone so sweet :( If you have pictures of them, you should post them, you have enough followers that everyone could look out for them for you! I took your advice... well sort of, I am still trying to grow bonsai from seeds, but I went out and bought a few little trees that I am going to try and make bonsai out of! It's so much fun! I bought my hubby a 3D printer to make me bonsai pots! So now we are both doing bonsai as well as my daughter who has about 30 little seedlings. Thank you so much and bless you and yours.
well, of course they get stolen, some of these art worth 1000s if not 10000s. that's why especially in japan these bonsai nurseries have very heavy gated areas and surveillance all over the place before you enter
Both observations are true enough. However, for the lay person, it is most likely very difficult to make much money, even with exceptional pieces. So, it ends up being unfortunate more than anything...😭
This happened to a bonsai museum near me. People stole priceless pieces, but then realized the those who would pay what they were worth knew they were stolen. They came back, almost dead...😣 Hopefully, they live.
Thank you Mr. Chan, and all who contribute to these wonderful videos. In the UK there is a place called Eggleston Hall Gardens, they have a wide variety of unusual, beautiful conifers; I wouldn't mention it, but they are not in competition with Herons, as they do not produce bonsai, and you said it was difficult to find interesting conifers.
Hi! I am subscribed to your TH-cam channel for almost a year now and I am already doing bonsai.I find your videos really good. While viewing your video on making a bonsai from Christmas tree, and I just want to mention that here in Québec and all around Canada we use the Balsam fir as Christmas tree. Balsam fir has flat non stinging nettles. Thanks.
Greetings from Baltimore...I save honeybees as you save and collect trees...I can't say no to making sure bees have a chance to thrive. Many thanks for your relaxing and informative videos. If I could ask for another ficus tutorial? I have a tree my wife and I bought 25 years ago and would like to make it more like bonsai...THANK YOU PETER!!!
So Breathtaking and Beautiful and Speechless so educational design projects love to hear from you teach how to do Bonsi trees 💖💖💖
Thank you for your comment
Part 28 of Sunday breakfast with Peter
Best way to start the day
Stay well
Stay safe
I know. l'm loving this channel. He has so much experience and has given me so much confidence with my plants! I almost feel like my bonsai know he's teaching me, haha.
I'm very glad I watched, this was one of the most peaceful videos I've ever seen
Very inspiring session with results I wouldn't have expected. I always wonder how these trees look some years after their first training.
Good Sunday morning everyone.
dear sir, we can't get enough of your amazingly relaxing and informative videos !! you are an amazing teacher and we can't thank you enough for your blessings !
I just found this site and am so happy! Snip, snip and snip and you make it look beautiful. Amazing!
This master is so incredibly gifted! What a gift to nature. Thank you Sir, for sharing your talent.
Thank you Bodie, l appreciate all the work you put into these productions. More please.😊❤☕
every morning i wake up in California i look forward to your posts. Love them! Keep it up!!!!
Amazing.amazing. Please continue to share your talent with all of us. Thank you.
Thank you.... 🙏 😔 🙏
Dr. Chan another wonderous video, showing that any plant can be made into a Bonsai. Thank you for educating us in the art of Bonsai. As always there is so much knowledge and information that you share. Once again, thank you. I am watching this just before Christmas and there are always quite a few "Christmas trees" that are in the trash and each year I rescue a few and add them to my collection. They make wonderful bonsais and grow well here. You have given me some new ideas, as usual.
🎄🙏 🖖 🙏 😔 🙏 🙏 🙏 🎄
I'm new to Bonsai myself. These videos and knowledge is fantastic to someone like me who is just getting into the art of keeping Bonsai.
Great information and the tutorials are amazing to watch, so helpful, yet also very relaxing.
I discovered your awesome videos yesterday, in the afternoon, and since then I'm watching them. I was wondering if you can provide some tips regarding a lemon/ citrus trees. You have my most sincere appreciation for your entire contribution, on this subject!!🙏👏👏
i was wondering how he would do the top all the time, then he suddenly bends the top branch a bit, and boom its looks amazing
Hilversum, Netherlands. 5:40 that's where I was born :) In the hospital though not the tree. 😁
But who could blame you, if you were.
When you turned the last tree around I gasped because it looked so much like a feathered dragon just on its own. Beautiful
I love your bonsai Sir Peter. You're so humble the way you talked, Watching from the Philippines.
Words of Wisdom from Peter. 30:21 31:10 33:05 and 1:20:59 some really excellent insight and suggestions. Thankyou very much for this very informative video. Stay safe.
Thank you for inspiring me to start Bonsai trees .It all started with a jadeplant given to me..
My first graft was a picea glauca pendula over 30 years ago. I still have it growing in my garden.
They are all beautiful future bonsai, want them all. Thanks for sharing Peter and can't wait for the next one. Stay safe to all and Cheers..😇
I'd rather make bonsai over watching tv any day. This was interesting to watch.
Thank you Peter (and editors). Loads of knowledge in this video!
I absolutely LOVE that weeping one!!!
" look at all those lovely growth, I'm gonna cut all that lovely growth off..." Master Chan you are heartless !!! :o
Love your work though !!! :)
I love your videos...I used to live in CA, but now in Las Vegas and trying to relearn what I know, and bringing it indoors.
Hi Peter thank you for another priceless masterclass. And thank you Bodie for your hard work in the background. Hope to see many more.
Everything you did is masterpiece...I admire your imaginations
Thank you. Your knowledge of conifers transfers to your knowlegde of life beautifully!
Could you do a video on making apex (crowns) on different kinds of trees? Like on deciduous trees, pines, larches, yews and maybe if it matters how to adjust the apex on the style of tree. Formal upright, informal, casquade, ect.
Thank you for the videos I've been doing bonsai for about 10 years, and absolutely love the hobby. Your videos have helped alot. I only have one bonsai that is from a nursery.
thank you for continuing to share your knowledge and experience so generously. I'm left inspired after each one of your videos. your no nonsense approach, sense of humor and 'simplicity' in approach belies your great depth and knowledge of the art form that is bonsai. much appreciated.
I was so sad about those plants that got stolen! I can't imagine they had a great life. At least he got to harvest cutlings (cut-lings?) from those trees so they technically are still living on. My mom had a big Jade plant I have always loved growing up. When I moved out I took a branch of that Jade with me, the mother plant died in a flood, but I still have my cutling, which is now almost as big as the mother plant was 10 years ago. Plants are simply amazing.
Beautiful work, beautiful trees I have to say mr. chan. I started watching your channel about a year ago and I have learned so much from you. It's about time to give you a big and sincere thank you for all that you have taught me. Not only facts but ways of thinking. Thank you very much. If I ever get the opportunity I will pay you and all you plants a visit. Greetingz from Germany, stay save. :)
Thank you - glad I am able to share some knowledge with you,
Excellent video as always. I appreciate that you do not shy away from species that are not typically known for being made into bonsai.
I am not a big fan of those Latin scientific names but now I will surely try because I just learned what 'glauca' means. Thank you Peter. Your such a good teacher. All the three trees are beautiful but the weeping spruce literati is my favourite. I know you are self videoing and having difficulty but please don't stop teaching.
I love watching you in action Peter, you make it look so easy! The second one you did turned out nice but I would of liked to see your "drastic" rendition. I love a challenge! The weeping one was unique, I would have just enjoyed its gentle grace as it wept! I hope you can instruct for many more years to come. Thank you.
Beautifull I like the blackbird whistling in the background
Thank mister Chan
I love those types of video 👌
Peter Chan is the Bob Ross of bonsai. Happy little trees…
A couple thoughts on identification: the first spruce you are calling Picea pungens 'Globosa' is more likely Picea bicolor (possibly a variety like 'Howell's Dwarf', with the shorter blunter needles that are blue on one side and green on the other and bright purple cones. Pungens has much longer sharper needles and dusky rose color to the new cones. There is another spruce with two colored needles called Picea omorika, but it also tends to have longer needles. The third tree you worked on does look like a pungens.
Way to go, Peter! What a _marathon_ session and yet *harmony* you've acheived in the three specimens ... brilliant
That was what my wife kept saying to me and still says, "why another plant??" I will tell you that in 105 to 115 degree weather it takes a toll on everything. I have to water every single Night to keep things living. I expect to water my Bonsai every night, but all plants every night? Having to water at night when it hits 90 degrees or the water doesn't seem to absorb well into the plant. Or maybe its just me thinking it doesn't. Decided to get that book by Mr. Harrison, so I got lucky and found a hard back on Amazon!!! Thank you Sir for the information. Love the birds, miss the East Coast birds of the Mountains in the USA. I now being in the deserts of Arizona. Always looking for the character of the curve. Lady at a nursery I visit saying oh this is a better plant, it is growing straight, I said it is nice, but has no character, I'll take this curvy one.
I love de final results
Amazing job Peter
Every time I watch him make a big cut I’m like nooooooo then always ends up like ok It’s a masterpiece
That's why you pay him the big bucks. Not only do you get a work of art, but you get your very own personalized YT video!
They are absolutely beautiful!
I will buy your book now. Thanks for sharing all of your bonsai experiences👍
My first time watching your show. I have to say it is very relaxing and educational. Thank you.
Fantastic tutorial,as usual. Thanks Peter.
Very relaxing to watch these. Would love to try this one day
Yea, he made this vid so you could relax... 😌😅
Give it a shot! That's how I got into it. I just saw a neat tree one day and decided it was time to try
I hope you know how phenomenal you are. I am watching TH-cam after TH-cam of your craft/hobby ...inspiring...I live in an apartment...now where to gather trees. You are magnificent.
So rich and didactic these video is. Thank you very much for sharing all that knowledge. Amazing.
Love your videos! The segment with the branch splitter was so enlightening. Thank you so much.
I love you man, you are so thoughtful with us showing us up close with camera where your going to make the cut (the view is worth a hundred words for sure in my case. This is by far feels like I am right in the instruction room with Peter Chan. It is not inconvenient for you to do all these small things (that are huge for me). And when you say "and how easy is that" make me smile?
Your right about going to a nursery and what one needs is not what one finds but the fashionable . I'm going to ask my brother if he could find me a small spruce in the Northern Ontario woods (lots of spruce forest there) wrap it well and send it to me. I'm not sure if he will think its a good idea.
The finished Picea is stunning. I'm inspired. Many thanks
I love your videos and especially your beautiful voice and vocabulary. I live on the ocean in Ucluelet, British Columbia and I have questions about making massive Katsura bonsai, in a very large container I have over 60 seedlings. I wonder if anyone has ever done a forest this size?
ahhh finally some good & wholesome content 😌🪴
You have taught me so much in so little time I really appreciate the videos
Thank you so much, Peter!
Since becoming enamored with Bonsai recently, you've become my teacher. I try to fit in at least one video a day!
Again, THANKS!
Very nice ! You’re giving me the encouragement to tackle my 3 year cuttings . It’s hard to stop getting more cuttings !
This man and his channel are such a treasure.
Fantastic job! I hope to have an amazing collection like yourself one day! My bonsais are lacking but I’ll use your methods and hope mine turn out as nice as yours one day!!
Hi there I enjoyed watching had a great time the trees came out quite well you do such a good job on them thank you so much for making these vedios takes care
Yet another cracking video Peter,what would we do without you.
amezing!! i lear so many new things!
i love listening to the birds!
lol so true I have several bonsai but I still keep aquiring them.
The more the merrier is so true with bonsai!
@Norwegian Spruce merrier is another word for happier. More the merrier is an old saying that rolls off the tounge. It's usually used when talking about people company, but it can be used wherever we please as well :)
Love the lessons thank you for sharing your wisdom.
Even just found a beautiful hinoki. Its so nice I couldn't bring myself to trim much. I mosty just plucked the growth between its natural pads to empathize its already beautiful growth. I usually butcher most nursery stock as a side note. Yet it looks like full grown tree as is. So I am ecstatic with it. Yes its considered a false cypress but ya..
Ohhhh, I always love finding these videos I haven't seen!
Thank you Bodie for your tireless work in editing and managing youtube! Funny the a spruce video came up. I was just looking on street view at my childhood home where, some 50 years ago and before I was born, my Father planted two Picea Glauca (not pendula) pretty close to the road. Throughout my childhood they were maybe 12-15 feet tall and had started really filling out in width as well. I always really loved that unique blue color! Well, now there is just one and looks surely 40-50 feet tall. Alas it must have some disease or some other unfortunate condition as it is rather bedraggled looking and now appears much less blue. Ahh well, never can tell what will happen to a tree over time.
Good job Peter , they look great. 😊
Magical transformation !
Lovely interesting stuff, with the bonus of blackbirds singing.
Loving this tutorial. Thank you Peter. I'm hooked. Three bonsai already and a jacaranda, recent acquisition, that I'm in awe of. Hope I can keep it alive!
I am pretty sure you are mistaken about the Picea Pungens Glauca Pendula. To me it looks like a Picea Abies Acrocona. I have one in my garden and it has very similar growth to the specimen in your garden. Also gets small red cones in the spring at the end of the new shoots. And great work on all three trees. Btw there are some really good conifers nurseries stil in the UK with 1000 of plants and they ship.
One benefit of the current situation is that there is no more airplane noises on these videos! Only birdsong as beautiful background music