Tag Archives: Points

First Time Bonsai: a 5 Points Survival Guide

More often than not, the approach to bonsai art comes with a present. A friend, a relative or a partner gives a new little tree in a short pot and he can’t tell us how to handle it.

Those bonsai trees are set on a piece of furniture or next to a window and normally die in a couple of months. Here comes the misconception that bonsai trees die after a short time.

But a bonsai can live among hundreds of years (there are specimens of 1000 years and more), so you are not excused if you let your bonsai die. But what to do with that strange thing?

This is a brief kick start guide to help you in the first months with your bonsai:

Establish what species it is: first thing first you have to know what species your bonsai tree belongs to. It is important because every species has different needs. This may be a hard task, there are hundreds of species and each can have a lot of varieties and cultuvar.

To start you don’t need to know the exact variety or cultuvar, you just need to know the general name of the species: it could be a maple, an elm or it could be a pine or a juniper.

Arborday.org has a guide on the trees classification that can help you. Also Wikipedia has a classification list.

Set your bonsai tree outdoor: unless your bonsai belongs to a species native of tropical regions, you have to put it outdoor (of course if you live in a tropical place you can set your tropical bonsai outdoor). A bonsai cannot survive indoor due to a handful of reasons, if you assume your bonsai is an ornament you are wrong. Period.

If you identify the species, you can know the precise spot where to set it. Usually conifers should go in full-sun, the other species should be set in mid-shadow or even shadow. This is a really rough distinction and there are a lot of exceptions, a good cultivation sheet can help you a lot.

Learn how to water it: watering is a crucial task and one of the most difficult of bonsai cultivation. Every species needs different quantities of water, and you should understand the needs of your own bonsai tree.

The bonsai lives in a small pot, there’s a relatively small quantity of soil in it and the tree can certainly suffer dryness and temperature excursions.

As a general rule, if it is summer you have to water your bonsai every evening. If you water it in the morning the soil will dry in no time and the tree will suffer. If you water it in the evening it’ll have all the time it needs to adsorb water and nutriments and, even if the next day the soil will dry, the bonsai will not suffer.

During spring and fall you have to diminish watering, just wait until the surface of the soil starts to dry out and only then water. It is easy to over-water your bonsai tree, so follow the rule above and you should be ok.

During winter the bonsai wants little water, just keep the soil humid, not wet, and water when it begins to dry.

There are two watering methods: the first is giving your tree a shower and continue until the water exits from the drainage holes; the second is to immerse the pot in a can of water and let the soil adsorb.

In both cases remember to bathe the foliage too (never if the sun still hits).

Fertilize your bonsai: fertilizing is the most underrated task by the novice. It is really important to fertilize the bonsai because the soil in the pot will easily loose it’s nutriments for the tree.

The quantity of soil is limited and it is an isolated environment so it’s our duty to provide nutriments. If your matter si if water is sufficient, the answer is no. Can you live just drinking water? No. For your bonsai is the same thing.

Until you become an expert, a balanced fertilizer (10:10:10) will do it’s work. You don’t have to acquire a bonsai specific fertilizer, the bonsai has the same physiology of all the vegetables, every fertilizer will do. Remember just to dilute it more than the recommendations say or you’ll risk to burn your bonsai.

A simple and good solution would be to use the hanagokoro, a Japanese organic fertilizer, very strong, easy and safe to use as it is almost impossible to overfeed.

You should fertilize during spring, when the vegetation begins, until July (in the boreal hemisphere) then stop in the hottest period. Restart in the second half of August until October (November for the conifers).

Get another bonsai: only action will allow you to gain the sufficient experience to manage a bonsai. Keep collecting bonsai and make your own, with try and errors you will become an expert.

Needless to say it is a great satisfaction to produce your own bonsai and a lovely feeling to watch your bonsai garden growing.

You may have noticed I have omitted such tasks as pruning, wiring, jin, shari and so on. This is a primer, a kick start guide, born just to help you keeping alive your bonsai.

Defining what is a bonsai isn’t easy, but we can resume it in the “perfect balance between the tree, it’s form and the pot hosting it”. If you don’t learn how to take care of your tree, and limit your experience to this primer, your bonsai will survive but it’ll loose its “bonsai title” in a couple of years or less.

If you are serious with bonsai art, you want to study. You can buy books – I will soon post reviews – or read some good online resource – in the sidebar there are a phiew -.

Of course keep reading this blog, I will post a lot of things about bonsai.

If you think this list isn’t complete (keep in mind it’s a survival guide), feel free to add your points.

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Flower Gardening Pictures- 9 Important Points For The Shutterbug

If you should ever observe a range of photographs, you would notice that the most frequently photographed object is the simple “flower”! The reasons for capturing flowers on camera and presenting them as flower gardening pictures for public viewing, are varied.

It is hard for anyone to fathom how nature has managed to come up with such a myriad variety of colors! Fortunately, flowers are able to survive in all sorts of habitats, so beauty is to be seen everywhere! Not to forget the intoxicating perfumes that waft into the surrounding atmosphere because of their presence! Thus, flower gardening pictures have become a favorite topic for photographers all over the world.

Some aspects of flower gardening pictures are presented here–

(1) Every photographer realizes that the “flower” is a prized work of art produced by nature that is appreciated the world over, especially by avid gardeners. So these flower gardening pictures find their way into web sites dedicated to gardening, books on gardening, gardening magazines, guides and encyclopedias dedicated to gardening.

(2) There is no need to go in for highly advanced technological gadgets to snap photographs of flower gardens! Whatever camera is used, simple or expensive, good focusing will ensure a good picture. Experts believe that the photograph with its background is already present; only the “clicking” of the camera is required. So there is competition among the professionals to trap these “blooming beauties” forever in the form of pictures!

(3) The major aim is to inspire a viewer to go in for flower gardening! If the right interest can be created via these photographs, more and more people will realize the potential in creating a garden full of flowers.

(4) It is not necessary for the photographer to concentrate on a single flower. The idea is to impress the viewer with the beauty presented in the picture. So, the camera’s focus can be directed towards individual flowers; flowers in the foreground or background along with solid structures, or vice versa; small areas; or large expanses–depending on the purpose for which the photograph is being snapped.

(5) The time of the day is also related to the purpose behind the picture. It could be daytime or evening time. The focus could be on sunny areas in the garden or the shady parts.

(6) Additionally, it is entirely up to the photographer whether he/she wishes to present the entire picture, or just a bit of it and leave the viewer to fill in the gaps. Creativity can always find an outlet in different ways! What is important to realize is that flower gardening pictures represent reality in all its significence, they are not just mere copies!

(7) Since these photographs are meant for public viewing, novice gardeners as well as expert gardeners can use them as references. There are pictures of all types of healthy flowers, container gardening arrangements, various designs related to gardens, complete gardens, and so on.

(8) The idea is to get the viewer’s creative juices flowing! It can lead to more people deciding to take up the hobby of gardening. It can inspire gardeners to try out similar ideas as presented in the photographs, or even improve upon them. They can indicate what a garden will ultimately look like after it is finished.

(9) One need not be a professional photographer to capture flowers on camera! A dedicated gardener can create his/her own flower gardening pictures too. It would help to maintain a journal of photographs, indicating “what it was like before” and “what it is like now”. Photographs have to be taken regularly–the actual plot meant for the garden, growing seasons, final display. Written notes below each picture will serve as records for the future. Thus, the next garden is sure to be an improved, and much better version of the earlier one!

Abhishek is an avid Gardening enthusiast and he has got some great Gardening Secrets up his sleeves! Download his FREE 57 Pages Ebook, “Your Garden – Neighbor’s Envy, Owner’s Pride!” from his website http://www.Gardening-Master.com/762/index.htm . Only limited Free Copies available.