Whoa.. Smallest five needles I've ever seen.. And the deshojo 😍 what a nice sight, hope to see more maples, it's been a while. Thx for sharing Peter, cheers.
New to your channel , just realizing how substantial your operation is . Thank you for your posts, l am trying to introduce my children to this art ,as l begin my study hopefully the 3 of them will have bonsai that will live long with them when l have passed.
Appreciating ANY videos right now on pines. In my collection of about 20 trees, I aquired my very first pine, ( Black pine) and am now trying to gather ALL the info I need to make this little, young pine a strong healthy project. One I wont finish, but becoming a good caretaker for a tree to someday become a work of art, is most important to me these days..
Peter, you really need to spend some time talking about aftercare following restyling and repotting. I imagine that you put them in a greenhouse or hoop house but most of us don’t have access to that so what should we do to maximize success after repotting? And what about watering and fertilizing afterwards?
Some truely lovely trees can only imagine all the work and care gone into them over the decades. Thank you for the video and showing the lovely spring buds my favourite time of the year
I love your videos so much! 😍 They have helped me to prune my crabapple and dogwood yard trees so they look amazing! I also have a ton of little volunteer trees that have come up around my property and I am digging them up and turning them into bonsai this year, many of them maples, and one a Japanese maple from my neighbors tree across the street! I live in Connecticut so we have a lot of maples and elm and beech that sprout tons of seedlings every year. Your videos are so helpful and I watch at least one every day! ❤️ Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge with the world! 🥰
Peter Chan U silly fool,I love it when U say that ,I'm new at this n love ur enthusiasm n knowledge, I've watched everyone on the utube n U guys have all explained ur beginning n interests into bonsai,I,d like ur favourite band or style of music cheers
Just got interested in bonsai a couple of days ago. And I already watched a ton of your videos. I must say that I cant stop watching them! I appreciate your general advice about life, about the bonsai art and eastern thinking. They are so refreshing and close to nature. Now I see things about nature and trees in another way and I like it. Thank you very much for these videos and I will definitely get my first bonsai soon. p.s. Don't change your accent, I love it :D
Hi Peter, thank you for this lovely video! I bought mini 2 kumquat trees and 1mini limequat tree.From Lidl here in the Netherlands. Now , I have used your method by stripping the roots and planting the trees on top of the soil and adding some small stones for support. Now all its leaves are dried up and the fruits are shrivelling on the kumquat trees. How do I help them recover from the shock ? Can you do a tutorial on the recovery of citrus bonsai please ?
I love mica pots, but they have become VERY expensive these days, and rather hard to find certain types here. I have three, but would love to get more for next years repotting. A VERY exciting time right now. I have no trees to repot this year, all are in good standing, all are fleshing out leaves, all are showing great new growth, now, I need to get my fertilizing schedule worked out. Much work to be done 'eh Peter?
I have a question. I made from a small multitrunk pine (Christmas) tree a bonsai but the root is as big as a bowl of 10 cm diameter. What to do with it? Cut it by half with a saw??? It won’t die then? Please, somebody can answer me? Thank you!
Good morning sir, I am yours subscriber and I watch all vedios, but I have a question you, how many days after doing the wiring of the plant, we should remove the wiring. Deepak From Shahdara, Delhi (. India)
As someone young and interested in plants and trees, im so glad i stumbled apon this channel :D I have a few questions, I have native trees in new zealand called kauri trees, they grow very wide and can grow very old. I want to clone a kauri tree but they grow very wide.Does the width or size of a trunk of a tree effect the growth? The name of the widest tree in my country is called tanemahuta and is a kauri tree that is infected at the moment due to tourist bringing unknown substances on there shoes but essentially that tree is part of my fears with turning kauri trees into a bonsai as it grows very wide. (Note im cloning a different kauri tree not tanemahuta)
I have a really big pine like this, too, and I use those cinching straps attached to the ceiling of my greenhouse to help lift it out of the pot and back in. It’s a slow process but it works! I use soft foam under the branches to prevent damage. So far so good. Since its such an old tree I don’t have to do it often, thankfully. I weighed just the tree last time (since I had it suspended anyway) and with the tree and the rootball (roots plus soil) it weighed 95 pounds. The pot weighed 35 by itself.
Slightly off topic. I'm working my way through the backlog of great Herons videos here after finding the channel. The other day I came to a video providing tips on how to recycle ordinary household articles into pots, tools, etc. Most of the tips was great, but in one was in my opinion really bad. Peter said he used to reuse styrofoam packing insert broken into pieces as pot filler when he wanted to plant a tree in a tall pot. This is really bad for the environment. Styrofoam won't break down in nature and when it appears to have done so it simply persists as micro plastic that is of no use to any living organism and potentially harmful. I would recommend just sending that to be recycled. Hopefully they actually recycle it or burn it and don't just ship it to a landfill.
Look at it this way- if I didn't use it- then it would be binned. This way - I keep using the old styrofoam. I try to recycle as much as possible. Visit our nursery and see the use we make of discarded material etc - not to speak of the plant waste that we compost !!
Absolutely Gorgeous Bonsai Trees and so much hard work going into making such a Beautiful creation 🌲🌲🌲🍁🍁🍁💃💃💖💖💖
Thank you for your comment (👍)😁
Whoa.. Smallest five needles I've ever seen.. And the deshojo 😍 what a nice sight, hope to see more maples, it's been a while. Thx for sharing Peter, cheers.
This is a beautiful classic looking tree.
Midweek Bonsai Breakfast Club 🙏
Magnificent pine bonsai as well as vivid deshojo tree. Above all I like Peter san. Thank you for sharing priceless video.
Bonsai Indonesia is here to listen om.. it's very useful for the bonsai.. keep the spirit and always healthy om..
New to your channel , just realizing how substantial your operation is . Thank you for your posts, l am trying to introduce my children to this art ,as l begin my study hopefully the 3 of them will have bonsai that will live long with them when l have passed.
Appreciating ANY videos right now on pines. In my collection of about 20 trees, I aquired my very first pine, ( Black pine) and am now trying to gather ALL the info I need to make this little, young pine a strong healthy project. One I wont finish, but becoming a good caretaker for a tree to someday become a work of art, is most important to me these days..
Peter, you really need to spend some time talking about aftercare following restyling and repotting. I imagine that you put them in a greenhouse or hoop house but most of us don’t have access to that so what should we do to maximize success after repotting? And what about watering and fertilizing afterwards?
Yes I will get to that but meanwhile do not feed for at least a month after repotting.
Great job. Thanks for the tips
Some truely lovely trees can only imagine all the work and care gone into them over the decades. Thank you for the video and showing the lovely spring buds my favourite time of the year
Another nice piece my friend stay safe Ernie smith from brisbane Australia
Those are some impressive specimens. Nice work as usual. Thanks, keep growing
As always awesome trees. Thank You Peter. Great video
You bring me such joy!
I love your videos so much! 😍 They have helped me to prune my crabapple and dogwood yard trees so they look amazing! I also have a ton of little volunteer trees that have come up around my property and I am digging them up and turning them into bonsai this year, many of them maples, and one a Japanese maple from my neighbors tree across the street! I live in Connecticut so we have a lot of maples and elm and beech that sprout tons of seedlings every year. Your videos are so helpful and I watch at least one every day! ❤️ Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge with the world! 🥰
Such an amazing video thank you Peter!
Thanks Peter. Bigger than I'll ever have.
Peter Chan U silly fool,I love it when U say that ,I'm new at this n love ur enthusiasm n knowledge, I've watched everyone on the utube n U guys have all explained ur beginning n interests into bonsai,I,d like ur favourite band or style of music cheers
Those are magnificent specimens. 😍 Thank you for sharing them with us.
Beautiful trees and great video. In my opinion these trees deserve a nicer pot than a mica pot.
I just received a 1992 Calendar of Herons Bonsai. Is is so cool.
Just got interested in bonsai a couple of days ago. And I already watched a ton of your videos. I must say that I cant stop watching them! I appreciate your general advice about life, about the bonsai art and eastern thinking. They are so refreshing and close to nature. Now I see things about nature and trees in another way and I like it. Thank you very much for these videos and I will definitely get my first bonsai soon.
p.s. Don't change your accent, I love it :D
Welcome!!!
Magnificent trees.
Hi Peter, Great video as always. Can you comment on how to tackle adelgids please?
New to the channel. I really enjoy your trimming and training videos. Your trees are beautiful!
Hi Peter, thank you for this lovely video! I bought mini 2 kumquat trees and 1mini limequat tree.From Lidl here in the Netherlands. Now , I have used your method by stripping the roots and planting the trees on top of the soil and adding some small stones for support. Now all its leaves are dried up and the fruits are shrivelling on the kumquat trees.
How do I help them recover from the shock ? Can you do a tutorial on the recovery of citrus bonsai please ?
I love mica pots, but they have become VERY expensive these days, and rather hard to find certain types here. I have three, but would love to get more for next years repotting.
A VERY exciting time right now. I have no trees to repot this year, all are in good standing, all are fleshing out leaves, all are showing great new growth, now, I need to get my fertilizing schedule worked out. Much work to be done 'eh Peter?
Thabk you, as always a lovely video.
I'm beginning to like those round pots, on any tree really, you can display them from any angle.
Peter to the rescue. I think that one was begging for a repot. Maybe stress was why he was affected and his neighbors weren't. All better now!
I have a question. I made from a small multitrunk pine (Christmas) tree a bonsai but the root is as big as a bowl of 10 cm diameter. What to do with it? Cut it by half with a saw??? It won’t die then? Please, somebody can answer me? Thank you!
impressive love from india
Looking forward to see a lot more Japanese maples, even though those pines is fantastic.
Hello would you recommend any soil from your shop for ficus???
Good morning sir, I am yours subscriber and I watch all vedios, but I have a question you, how many days after doing the wiring of the plant, we should remove the wiring. Deepak From Shahdara, Delhi (. India)
2-3 years depending on the species
👍🏻
What do you use to treat the pine for adelgids?
Any insecticide should be able to kill adlegids.
As someone young and interested in plants and trees, im so glad i stumbled apon this channel :D I have a few questions, I have native trees in new zealand called kauri trees, they grow very wide and can grow very old. I want to clone a kauri tree but they grow very wide.Does the width or size of a trunk of a tree effect the growth? The name of the widest tree in my country is called tanemahuta and is a kauri tree that is infected at the moment due to tourist bringing unknown substances on there shoes but essentially that tree is part of my fears with turning kauri trees into a bonsai as it grows very wide. (Note im cloning a different kauri tree not tanemahuta)
Anyones help is welcome :)
Can anybody tell me, what kind of music is to hear at the end of the video?
🎼It's called newborn 😊
Live your life with no regrets, every thing that I have done and have had done to me, is who I am today, but have
Looking forward to meeting you at Herons
I have a really big pine like this, too, and I use those cinching straps attached to the ceiling of my greenhouse to help lift it out of the pot and back in. It’s a slow process but it works! I use soft foam under the branches to prevent damage. So far so good. Since its such an old tree I don’t have to do it often, thankfully. I weighed just the tree last time (since I had it suspended anyway) and with the tree and the rootball (roots plus soil) it weighed 95 pounds. The pot weighed 35 by itself.
🔥💕👌👍
👍👌👌🍎
Slightly off topic. I'm working my way through the backlog of great Herons videos here after finding the channel. The other day I came to a video providing tips on how to recycle ordinary household articles into pots, tools, etc. Most of the tips was great, but in one was in my opinion really bad. Peter said he used to reuse styrofoam packing insert broken into pieces as pot filler when he wanted to plant a tree in a tall pot. This is really bad for the environment. Styrofoam won't break down in nature and when it appears to have done so it simply persists as micro plastic that is of no use to any living organism and potentially harmful. I would recommend just sending that to be recycled. Hopefully they actually recycle it or burn it and don't just ship it to a landfill.
Look at it this way- if I didn't use it- then it would be binned. This way - I keep using the old styrofoam. I try to recycle as much as possible. Visit our nursery and see the use we make of discarded material etc - not to speak of the plant waste that we compost !!
FFFOIST