Hey Scott. I was the one who asked about the White Pine that was used as the demonstration. My aim was to understand the history of the tree as that information is very attractive to me. I agree with the translator on age but that was just 1 part of my question. I did get the history from the original owner and it made that tree so much more attractive to me. Thanks for your podcast!
@@longhuynh1815 thanks for getting in touch and that’s great to get your perspective. I found it interesting the approach of etiquette when it came to age as I’d never heard it before. Can understand why the history makes it more attractive to you too.
Great stuff as always. Really wanting to get in to repotting, but the mornings are so frosty, the trees are coming out like ice blocks. I've been trying to line up the next few against the side of the house over night to help them.
Awesome episode! Question for you. When talking about soil, would you use the same mix for a tree that’s in development or change it to something that’s more organic and not so porous? I feel like the soil mix you mentioned would be better for a tree that’s already developed and in its refinement stage. I’m trying to focus on growth, longer roots, root thickening and trunk thickening.
@@coreypetersen7630 this mix for me is for all of my trees in their various stages of development. It promotes really strong root growth which then give you foliage growth. It’s how you prune or don’t prune the foliage that you can use to your advantage when developing your bonsai.
@@BonsaiMatsu thank you for replying back to me. I will be definitely changing my soil mix come next repotting season here in the United States. I’m very new to all this and trying to get as much info as I can. Thank you again and I love the podcast.
I went out and repotted a maple while listening in, thanks again
Hey Scott. I was the one who asked about the White Pine that was used as the demonstration. My aim was to understand the history of the tree as that information is very attractive to me. I agree with the translator on age but that was just 1 part of my question. I did get the history from the original owner and it made that tree so much more attractive to me.
Thanks for your podcast!
@@longhuynh1815 thanks for getting in touch and that’s great to get your perspective. I found it interesting the approach of etiquette when it came to age as I’d never heard it before. Can understand why the history makes it more attractive to you too.
Great stuff as always. Really wanting to get in to repotting, but the mornings are so frosty, the trees are coming out like ice blocks. I've been trying to line up the next few against the side of the house over night to help them.
@@sanitychelle I bring mine into the workshop the day before to help dry them out
Awesome episode! Question for you. When talking about soil, would you use the same mix for a tree that’s in development or change it to something that’s more organic and not so porous? I feel like the soil mix you mentioned would be better for a tree that’s already developed and in its refinement stage. I’m trying to focus on growth, longer roots, root thickening and trunk thickening.
@@coreypetersen7630 this mix for me is for all of my trees in their various stages of development. It promotes really strong root growth which then give you foliage growth. It’s how you prune or don’t prune the foliage that you can use to your advantage when developing your bonsai.
@@BonsaiMatsu thank you for replying back to me. I will be definitely changing my soil mix come next repotting season here in the United States. I’m very new to all this and trying to get as much info as I can. Thank you again and I love the podcast.
@@coreypetersen7630 thank you 🙏🏻