Peters my mentor!! I started bonsai when I was 23 (3 years ago) and because of his videos I was able to have confidence do just really mess around and find out! I was never scared of wiring after seeing videos like this on his channel. A true mentor and master to all!! Thanks Peter!! P.s I lost about 50 trained trees to a windstorm that tore through my greenhouse set up… I’m back at it after such a loss. Don’t stop the bonsai folks! Perseverance!
Sorry for the late reply - sorry to hear about your loss but you have the right attitude - 18 months after I started my nursery there was a big storm with 150mph winds which destroyed all our 5 greenhouses and I had to start again - life is never easy but if you preserve you will succeed in the end.
The trunk splitting technique you used is not for the faint of heart. You’re design on the fly approach demonstrates your decades of experience and confidence. I’m sure many of us would love to see a progress visit of this tree in 6 months or so, to see how the tree is doing. Thank you Peter!
It is the no nonsense approach, making stuff that has been mystified for years, into a simple enjoyable practice for people of all ages and all ways of life. Peter is generous with his knowledge and he is a great teacher. I wanted to learn how to prune a Japanese maple tree in my garden and TH-cam led me to the Herons bonsai channel, 60 trees later still watching and learning
"Bonsai is a nice and calming hobby" Yeah I'm watching at 20:00 and almost having a heart attack. I guess with Peters experience living on the edge just comes naturally. Absolute madlad.
This was an awesome lesson on a variety of styles and I don't know who the camera person was, but the way they maneuver the angles and even zoomed in, in every opportunity they got, that was Dope 😎🤘
We are in the presence of a Master. Everything he says about the "reforming" of the tree is directly applicable to the human journey of reformation that each of us is on.
I wonder if when making a raft you could make a thin scrape in the under side of the bark or some intermittent slashes at the joints to encourage root initiation. Then I would water with a liquid root starter fertilizer once a week for a month or so. Just throwing out some theries. Being spring it should want to make roots.
I was watching and at several points I was smiling and thinking what a mess Peter is making. Then suddenly the genius of his plan appears. What an experienced guy and nerves of steel to split and bend those trunks. Four beautiful trees.
I enjoy a great leader being adventurous, bicycles tubes and a cleaver. Different types of boundaries are achieved when you are able to think outside the box. Great video again thank you for sharing.
Very nice trees, I am getting an appreciation for the literati, my friend with a nursery keeps giving me hopeless trees and right now I just repot to save them, hopefully they recover and I can style next growing season. Saw my very first raft in the wild, it was a douglas fir, I was wandering off trail (the only way to see interesting trees) and came upon it. Don't know how old it was but it's amazing a tree branch can become a tree without any wire or help. We are lucky to have some old growth forests around me, thankfully someone back in the 1800s decided to save some trees, most were cut to build a burgeoning ships harbor but some had the forethought to save some trees. Thanks for another great video to help expand the mind.
Love the long videos! Longer the better. More time spent with my good ol bonsai friends! Loved the raft style that was a great way for that tree to be reinvented.
So Nice long and detailed videos always - can I ask the one tre where u do those “jins” - is the purpose that there will grow new out since it is split up like that and the skin is removed
Hi Herons! I know I'm late on this question but I do have one regarding the raft pine. What do you do with the remainder of the root ball sitting above grade? I imagine it will just die back and dry up but I'm always loath to leave sections of roots exposed
Amazing on the fourth / last tree I literally thought and said in my mind There's no escaping it ( " it's crying out for littarati " ) At the exact time as you said it 😁 You have definitely influenced and left your imprint on me in bonsai thought process Peter
Such a treat to watch a master confront a challenge with that Mugo pine hybrid. I wonder if you rounded off the insides of the split if the split would eventually grow out. Or, given time, take a graft from 1 side or the other = 2 trees. That was one of the perhaps most challenging experiences I think I have seen Peter up against since I began viewing Herons videos. This is why we watch.... Thank you, Peter, watching your more challenging adventures in bonsai I believe to be a better educational experience for the rest of us. That tree would have had me contemplating for quite a while prior to happening across any reasonable solution. My only other possible solution to the split issue would be to have filled in the split to hold it apart prior to wiring in the hopes of the tree eventually growing back over time.
After using a cleaver, banging on it with a wood block and stating "well back to square one", no one is going to convince me about the sedative nature of making bonsai. This video w as a true treat, thank you!
What a great video! I have a pine tree I’ve been looking at for two years wondering what to do with it. Now I’m going to try something new tomorrow. God help the poor pine lol. Thanks Peter, Kim🇨🇦
I bought a huge (1,2m) japanese larch two days ago. Since then I am trying to figure out what I can possibly do. Maybe I try my very first Bunjin. Anyways this video is a great inspiration. Thx
Hi I've only been keeping trees since Easter I wish I had your vision I'm trying some of your techniques on my Japanese holly witch was a broom style so wired out the branches let's see what happens
My bonsai pine is I think over 100 years old but it’s not in particularly good shape and just has empty branches with a single growing tip on each one. I would like to make the foliage more full
do you have any advice for pines with longer leaves? I'm in Texas and the only pine we have is loblolly. I'm just not sure if the pines will shrink up and look proportional to the tree
Thank you Peter for once again inspiring us with your "magic" ie: experience, competence, generosity. I have a question, not directly related to this video. I have Nandina growing everywhere here in the South of Australia. Can I make bonsai with Nandina?
Nice video Peter, thanks! Just a question about the raft- the actual 'raft' is normally visible but on your pine you have covered it over- was that to try and trigger adventitious root growth (which you mentioned isn't common in pines) or was it just because the trunk was quite straight? What i mean is, it may be technically a raft but looks more like a forest planting. Great tips for leggy pines by the way!
The weather in Scotland changed from 28c to near freezing and constant rain last week it's never let up yet! Was frost on the car 2 mornings ago I've had to take precautions with my white pines keeping them out this constant rain for next 2 weeks everyday! Gets so depressing can't get anything done! Need to wire a couple trees and do an emergency slip pot of a new imported JWP that came in akadama absolutely rock hard the candles are really struggling! I'm scared abit to be honest at this time of the year I don't know what's best here!? Any tips would be very greatly appreciated from anyone. Thanks bonsai family
80 minute video? I love it!!
Peters my mentor!! I started bonsai when I was 23 (3 years ago) and because of his videos I was able to have confidence do just really mess around and find out! I was never scared of wiring after seeing videos like this on his channel. A true mentor and master to all!! Thanks Peter!!
P.s I lost about 50 trained trees to a windstorm that tore through my greenhouse set up… I’m back at it after such a loss. Don’t stop the bonsai folks! Perseverance!
Sorry for the late reply - sorry to hear about your loss but you have the right attitude - 18 months after I started my nursery there was a big storm with 150mph winds which destroyed all our 5 greenhouses and I had to start again - life is never easy but if you preserve you will succeed in the end.
The trunk splitting technique you used is not for the faint of heart. You’re design on the fly approach demonstrates your decades of experience and confidence. I’m sure many of us would love to see a progress visit of this tree in 6 months or so, to see how the tree is doing. Thank you Peter!
When he did that I actually gasped lol.
Feature length bonsai movie 🍿 😁
Hello mid week bonsai breakfast club
☕️🥐🌳❤️
Why do Peter’s videos make such compelling viewing? I don’t have bonsai but I love watching these videos. My kind of reality TV 😂
I prefer tropical plants (I have 7 philodendron), and I'm three videos in.
It is the no nonsense approach, making stuff that has been mystified for years, into a simple enjoyable practice for people of all ages and all ways of life. Peter is generous with his knowledge and he is a great teacher. I wanted to learn how to prune a Japanese maple tree in my garden and TH-cam led me to the Herons bonsai channel, 60 trees later still watching and learning
"Bonsai is a nice and calming hobby"
Yeah I'm watching at 20:00 and almost having a heart attack. I guess with Peters experience living on the edge just comes naturally. Absolute madlad.
you know is about to get serious when Peter gets the Butcher knife!! lol
I know what you mean
1:05:39 Love the photographer laughing at Peter's decision to cut !
Bonsaï Jazz !!!!!!!!!
Thanks Peter and team !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This was an awesome lesson on a variety of styles and I don't know who the camera person was, but the way they maneuver the angles and even zoomed in, in every opportunity they got, that was Dope 😎🤘
Lots of lessons learned from Mr Peter Chann many thanks.Ernie smith from brisbane Australia
We are in the presence of a Master. Everything he says about the "reforming" of the tree is directly applicable to the human journey of reformation that each of us is on.
I appreciate the hard work & dedication Herons Bonsai puts towards delivering premium content.
😂😂❤❤❤❤
Stunning to watch..just riveting...Thankyou very much
One hour and 20 mins of pure art and magic! Thx again Peter
2 D screen sure isn't doing those trees justice. I love the 3rd Bunjin 🌴..thx for sharing Peter.👏👍
You are making excuses up right now
I wonder if when making a raft you could make a thin scrape in the under side of the bark or some intermittent slashes at the joints to encourage root initiation. Then I would water with a liquid root starter fertilizer once a week for a month or so. Just throwing out some theries. Being spring it should want to make roots.
Works for Junipers
Vers les 30 min ce pin était majestueux ! Il voulait ressembler aux grands pins maritimes sur les collines du sud de la France.
As ever, humble but insightful instruction through demonstration! So useful!
Peter you bit the bullet several times in this video, each time with great results. Love Josh’s chuckle 🤭 in the video 😆
I was watching and at several points I was smiling and thinking what a mess Peter is making. Then suddenly the genius of his plan appears. What an experienced guy and nerves of steel to split and bend those trunks. Four beautiful trees.
I enjoy a great leader being adventurous, bicycles tubes and a cleaver. Different types of boundaries are achieved when you are able to think outside the box.
Great video again thank you for sharing.
Danke Peter für deine Inspirationen.Das war wieder ganz großes Kino. LG aus Sachsen-Anhalt , Germany...
Totally awesome kinda liking the raft pine,
Thanks.....
The older trees in this workshop are so incredibly impressive
Could we get an update on the tree you split with the cleaver?
One more master lesson. Knowledge, experience along with try and error are the keys. Thanks for sharing Peter.
Thanks Peter and Joshua for the masterclass 👍👍🇵🇷
Woow, some cuttings looks so drastic
And a huge thanks to Josh the cameraman for making sure we get great close shots of Peter at work!
Their all beautiful! Thank you for your time and for sharing and teaching.
Very nice trees, I am getting an appreciation for the literati, my friend with a nursery keeps giving me hopeless trees and right now I just repot to save them, hopefully they recover and I can style next growing season. Saw my very first raft in the wild, it was a douglas fir, I was wandering off trail (the only way to see interesting trees) and came upon it. Don't know how old it was but it's amazing a tree branch can become a tree without any wire or help. We are lucky to have some old growth forests around me, thankfully someone back in the 1800s decided to save some trees, most were cut to build a burgeoning ships harbor but some had the forethought to save some trees. Thanks for another great video to help expand the mind.
Love this stuff 🙏🏻🔥⚡️
Great video and awesome results looking to follow ups if these don't get snapped up. Thank you for sharing and all the work that went into making that
Awesome video this video made me go and make my first bonsai Tree it will be a Juniper tree a stricta ,really excited to start my journey ❤
Oh no the duck cleaver!! But as always just beautiful work by Peter. Thank you for showing us!
Lol that poor pine did NOT wake up today expecting to be split open and manhandled like that for sure. Haha love this guy
Love the long videos! Longer the better. More time spent with my good ol bonsai friends! Loved the raft style that was a great way for that tree to be reinvented.
Brilliant 🤩👏👏👏👏👍🥇🏆!! Really enjoyed this video! Love the raft😍 thanks Peter, you are the master!
Love to watch all these how-to-clip-n-wire videos. Would like to see how to water indoor/outdoor bonsai, or have I missed those vids?
You missed em he made some but video titles are sometimes kinda mixed but you should find the "how to water your bonsai"
th-cam.com/video/masZFcGq8tg/w-d-xo.html that is a good one
I love all of these trees. The raft especially since i did this last year with a juniper. Good to know it will root along the trunk 👍😁
You sir, are a master at your craft!
Great watching you work through the trees
This is amazing to watch! Thank you for sharing your artwork with us!
See eyesight because of judgment beautiful natural geography 🥰🥰
Much respect , your knowledge and energy are always appreciated.
So generous with your time Peter. These are some brilliant ideas and a glimpse into what is possible.
So Nice long and detailed videos always - can I ask the one tre where u do those “jins” - is the purpose that there will grow new out since it is split up like that and the skin is removed
Jins are dead driftwood - used just for decoration
The raft is my favorite.
wanderful trees!! I belive tha the literaty stylei is the most matching style for the pines.Ty for one more time for your saring knolege!
Hi Herons! I know I'm late on this question but I do have one regarding the raft pine. What do you do with the remainder of the root ball sitting above grade? I imagine it will just die back and dry up but I'm always loath to leave sections of roots exposed
Yes that's correct. If there are enough roots below the soil level then you can cut off the part which is sticking up above soil level.
@@peterchan3100 thanks Peter!
Awesome video.....thankyou
Amazing on the fourth / last tree
I literally thought and said in my mind
There's no escaping it
( " it's crying out for littarati " )
At the exact time as you said it 😁
You have definitely influenced and left your imprint on me in bonsai thought process Peter
I know what you mean whenever I’m repotting I always show off the trees to my family exclaiming “look at the roots”
Awesome!
I've never seen the raft before!
Just excellent!
This is why Peter Chen is so popular. He has such an innovative person.
Verry nice, great ideas!! Thank you🧘🏾♂️🌲
Awesome video
Such a treat to watch a master confront a challenge with that Mugo pine hybrid. I wonder if you rounded off the insides of the split if the split would eventually grow out. Or, given time, take a graft from 1 side or the other = 2 trees. That was one of the perhaps most challenging experiences I think I have seen Peter up against since I began viewing Herons videos. This is why we watch.... Thank you, Peter, watching your more challenging adventures in bonsai I believe to be a better educational experience for the rest of us. That tree would have had me contemplating for quite a while prior to happening across any reasonable solution. My only other possible solution to the split issue would be to have filled in the split to hold it apart prior to wiring in the hopes of the tree eventually growing back over time.
Fascinating to see your ideas develop as you work.
Amazing education, Mr Chan, thank you !!
if you cut a wedge out of a branch and place it between the split-cut, with the nerves going the same way and thén bind it. itll take i think
Hi Peter watching from Australia 🇦🇺 🙏☺️
Did anyone else's heart jump when he cracked the legs open on that pine? Lol. Settle down ladies. I'm sure he's taken.
My first tree was a blue spruce I trimmed a bit much 😅 now its gonna be a simple tree if it lives 😳 learned alot from that one project
After using a cleaver, banging on it with a wood block and stating "well back to square one", no one is going to convince me about the sedative nature of making bonsai.
This video w as a true treat, thank you!
I hope it didn’t give you a heart attack
I paused the video when I realized I was sitting on the edge of my seat, suspense.
if you split a branch is it a good idea to put some of the sap in the break to keep it from getting diseased?
Pines give out a resin which is like a tree sealant, so the chances of disease is minimal.
Thank you @@peterchan3100
It's amazing and beautiful 👍
Great class! Thanks 😊
When Peter pulls out the cleavers, I had to get out my popcorn again to enjoy.
Is there any way i can purchase starter bonsai from his organization? USA also dont use pounds
Sorry we dont ship abroad
Thanks Peter. I would never have thought to do a raft.
Always a pleasure to watch you perform your art form.
Love the content
I'm thinking drift wood and a large limestone all natural cuts put tree on natural curve
What a great video! I have a pine tree I’ve been looking at for two years wondering what to do with it. Now I’m going to try something new tomorrow. God help the poor pine lol.
Thanks Peter,
Kim🇨🇦
Nice sharing videos 👍
beautiful
I enjoyed watching Peter making the raft style Bonsai, I think it will look fantastic in the coming years.
Peter Chan's most important Tools the Cleaver and works wonderfully.😃
I bought a huge (1,2m) japanese larch two days ago. Since then I am trying to figure out what I can possibly do. Maybe I try my very first Bunjin. Anyways this video is a great inspiration. Thx
“Maybe we’ll just t’row that awayyy!”
Made me crack up 😂
Thank you very much for the beautiful and detailed video. It helps me a lot in my work. ☺
Can these bonsai stay out door for entire winter season ?
Yes they do. (sorry for the late reply- I cant go back to look at all my old videos)
Thanks Peter.
EXPECTACULAR UN GRAN DISEÑADOR ..EXELENTE TRABAJO VI DE TODO PODA TRANSPLANTE DIGNO DE IMITAR...GRACIAS PETER
We are just like provenance pines we lend ourselves to your long literality Videos
I borrowed one of your books from my public library! ❤
You inspire me, Master Chan!
omg he brought out the cleaver again! 😂
Hi I've only been keeping trees since Easter I wish I had your vision I'm trying some of your techniques on my Japanese holly witch was a broom style so wired out the branches let's see what happens
The fun part... like Russian roulette 😂😂😂
Can I start a lemon tree from my Chinese bonsai root...
What do you mean??
Hi Peter. You mentioned breaking a dormant bud to encourage new needle growth. How do you do it?
If you take the growing tip of any conifer it will encourage bud back on the old wood. Should work.
Thank you Peter
My bonsai pine is I think over 100 years old but it’s not in particularly good shape and just has empty branches with a single growing tip on each one. I would like to make the foliage more full
do you have any advice for pines with longer leaves? I'm in Texas and the only pine we have is loblolly. I'm just not sure if the pines will shrink up and look proportional to the tree
Same here, just find a small one that's been growing in the shade, it gives a different growth than the usual light pole shape
If you keep it pot bound - the needles can get a bit shorter. But not much you can do really. Work with pines that have shorter needles.
@@peterchan3100 the problem is the climate is not very forgiving in the summer. Thanks for the tips though
Thank you Peter for once again inspiring us with your "magic" ie: experience, competence, generosity. I have a question, not directly related to this video. I have Nandina growing everywhere here in the South of Australia. Can I make bonsai with Nandina?
Yes you can
Nice video Peter, thanks! Just a question about the raft- the actual 'raft' is normally visible but on your pine you have covered it over- was that to try and trigger adventitious root growth (which you mentioned isn't common in pines) or was it just because the trunk was quite straight? What i mean is, it may be technically a raft but looks more like a forest planting. Great tips for leggy pines by the way!
I'm still not convinced that big is better
Bunjingi is great for those pines ❤️ . But I think the first 2 trees would have looked great as a bankan style...it’s a bit of a risk though
The weather in Scotland changed from 28c to near freezing and constant rain last week it's never let up yet! Was frost on the car 2 mornings ago I've had to take precautions with my white pines keeping them out this constant rain for next 2 weeks everyday! Gets so depressing can't get anything done! Need to wire a couple trees and do an emergency slip pot of a new imported JWP that came in akadama absolutely rock hard the candles are really struggling! I'm scared abit to be honest at this time of the year I don't know what's best here!? Any tips would be very greatly appreciated from anyone. Thanks bonsai family