Bonsaify | Japanese Black Pine Root-Over-Rock Creation

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

Root-over-Rock bonsai mimic trees growing in rocky environments where over the years the topsoil has eroded away. These compositions have roots visibly clinging to a rockface and draping down into the soil below. Eric loves creating root-over-rock compositions with Japanese Black Pines, and in this video, he shares his process.
00:00:26 Eric begins by selecting the orientation for his rock - horizontal or vertical.
00:01:18 The tree has been growing in a 3 x 9 Anderson tree band; Eric removes it and looks at the distribution of feeder roots. He discusses artistic decisions that need to be made - how he wants the roots to flow over the stone.
00:02:20 Eric describes his vision and plan for stone orientation and placement of roots.
00:03:27 Tips for root placement with stones that have channels or pockets.
00:04:22 Baseline composition
00:04:56 How to attach tree to rock and make sure roots are grasping the rock really tightly.
00:05:32 Why Eric uses raffia to attach the tree to the stone.
00:06:15 The goal is to train the roots where Eric wants them, wrapping raffia to keep them in place. He may need to use muck to provide a sticky surface.
00:07:21 Eric explains that you need to make sure you have as firm contact as you can get with the roots on at least 2 sides of the rock.
00:09:41 The roots are firmly attached and moved so they're not completely straight.
00:10:43 Wire the tree trunk to incorporate tree and rock.
00:11:44 Go between needles as much as possible when wiring.
00:12:11 Eric moves from technical to artistic - styling the tree. He closes the space between the foliage and the stone.
00:13:43 Eric critiques tree placement from different "front" options and discusses creation of movement.
00:15:09 Next step is figuring out how you'll put the tree back into a container - need to bury some of the roots. Eric uses a basket and auxiliary container (cuts off bottom to make it into a tube).
00:16:40 Eric preps the container. Pumice and coarse bark as base soil mix.
00:17:23 Eric holds the tree in place in container while he fills around it with soil, so the roots are surrounded by soil.
00:18:12 Eric summarizes the process for potting stone and tree with roots.
If this video has inspired you, order our Root-Over-Rock Japanese Black Pine Kit to create your own bonsai! www.bonsaify.com/products/roo.... You can follow along step-by-step and create the composition of your dreams!
You may also find this video interesting - "Rock Selection for "Root-Over-Rock" Style Bonsai Trees" • Bonsaify | Rock Select... .
Thank you for watching; please like and share this video, and subscribe to our KZread channel for more great bonsai video content!

Пікірлер: 23

  • @thesuperiorgamer7524
    @thesuperiorgamer7524 Жыл бұрын

    I really hope your channel takes more root in the bonsai community. Your videos are so informative and high quality, I find them a very affective teaching tool in my bonsai journey. Keep up the good work!

  • @corysutton1383
    @corysutton1383 Жыл бұрын

    Appreciate the comment about grooved stones. My natural tendency would have been to aim the roots for the grooves in the stone. Your point about further emphasizing those contours makes sense.

  • @WanderingBobAK

    @WanderingBobAK

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here. I purposely place sphagnum down these grooves to channel roots on my orchids as the roots follow areas with more moisture. Then you hide the cool features of cork bark mounts and in this case ... the rocks.

  • @alexm9148
    @alexm9148 Жыл бұрын

    I love your videos because they are very informative and nicely done ✅. I also love them because you are so charismatic and charming. Well done 👌

  • @dermo1981
    @dermo1981 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Eric. Hope you had a great Christmas and all the best for 2023

  • @jyudy7dytcjux
    @jyudy7dytcjux2 жыл бұрын

    I can’t wait to plant the seedlings I purchased from you. Thanks for sharing these tips- I especially like the way the 1 gallon pot is stacked and secured with wire. Also, I hadn’t thought about tying the roots to the rock with raffia. Thank you for sharing ideas that will work.

  • @Bonsaify

    @Bonsaify

    Жыл бұрын

    You are so welcome!

  • @estherlovesveges
    @estherlovesveges Жыл бұрын

    Looking mint..

  • @hyperionhelios190
    @hyperionhelios190 Жыл бұрын

    Needed this today. Thanks for another great video Eric.

  • @timmywood9677
    @timmywood9677 Жыл бұрын

    I made a root over rock Camellia with white flowers last year

  • @bonsaibythesea
    @bonsaibythesea5 ай бұрын

    Nice video thanks 😮

  • @mrdrewdrew20
    @mrdrewdrew202 жыл бұрын

    How long should you leave it buried? And when should you gradually expose the roots on the rock so they harden off?

  • @Bonsaify

    @Bonsaify

    2 жыл бұрын

    Both good questions - Generally, I leave them buried for an entire growing season, then expose them, adjust (did a video on that recently) and then re-bury them if they are still too small to expose. You can do it gradually also, like removing an inch of the soil, then wait a couple months, and remove another inch.

  • @teaniner
    @teaniner Жыл бұрын

    I plan doing a root over rock composition similar to this video this spring. I go back n forth on purchasing a pine from you with the longer grown roots or just using some of the pines I purchased from you last winter, they are very healthy and nice looking. So my main question is. How to determine the size of rock? Will that one you are doing in this video always be Shohin size? In 20-30 years will it have a similar feel? Due to the size of the rock and a tree just naturally growing. I’m struggling with the size and it getting naturally bigger. Please shed some knowledge on sizing and longevity. Always look to a new video each day or week. You are my Netflix. ❤

  • @Bonsaify

    @Bonsaify

    Жыл бұрын

    Think of the combination of the roots and the rock as the "trunk". That should be your guide for how large the tree would be. So for a shohin - the rock shouldn't be more than about 4" tall at the most, but it can be wider. You can extend the trunk upward with a good transition, but if you move the foliage too far away from the rock you get a weird separation of the visual.

  • @mattbrennan647
    @mattbrennan6475 ай бұрын

    Amazing tutorial. How long will you keep it in that container? Thanks, keep growing

  • @mattbrennan647

    @mattbrennan647

    5 ай бұрын

    I see you already answered this question. Thanks.

  • @eeeealmo
    @eeeealmo Жыл бұрын

    New camera?

  • @Bonsaify

    @Bonsaify

    Жыл бұрын

    Actually, we filmed this over a year ago, (I had a friend filming with his SLR) but it was only available for folks that purchased the ROR kit from our site. I just did a follow up video, which we'll release in a few days, so you get step 1 and 2.

  • @ThePhilClark
    @ThePhilClark11 ай бұрын

    I am in Southern California. When can you do this kind of work on a pine with out killing it? I have not had much look with root type work like this. Thank you.

  • @Bonsaify

    @Bonsaify

    11 ай бұрын

    When I lived there it would have been January that I would do it. You can do it even in December, but in either case, plan to protect from freezing afterward if that is something you deal with in your location.

  • @ronniebruce9624
    @ronniebruce9624 Жыл бұрын

    Eric do you sell the JPB root over rock trees without the kit?

  • @Bonsaify

    @Bonsaify

    Жыл бұрын

    We generally do - but our inventory is low on these right now, so I had removed them from the store. I should have more ready for sale by June or so.

Келесі