Corin Tackles A Field Grown Japanese Maple - Greenwood Bonsai
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
Welcome to our latest video on refining Japanese maple bonsai! In this video, we'll show you the techniques and tips for refining your own Japanese maple bonsai tree, making it look even more stunning.
We'll cover the different stages of refining, including pruning and shaping to help you achieve the perfect look for your bonsai. You'll learn how to remove unwanted branches and how to properly care for your bonsai to ensure its health and longevity.
Corin Tomlinson will guide you through the entire process, sharing his knowledge and experience gained from years of working with these beautiful trees. You'll see how to create a balanced and aesthetically pleasing bonsai.
Whether you're new to the art of bonsai or you're a seasoned pro, this video is a must-watch for anyone looking to refine their Japanese maple bonsai. So sit back, relax, and enjoy our step-by-step guide to refining your very own Japanese maple bonsai!
Пікірлер: 79
Love your videos, Corin, they give me a lot of pleasure. I have a few small trees ( small elms from B&Q and a few airlayers from my garden ), but over the past year, I have slowly become disabled. Due to nerve damage, I struggle to use my arms and can no longer feel my hands and fingers. Wiring is now impossible, and my wife puts scissors or pruners in my hand and helps me to try and trim them. So you see, I really appreciate seeing your wonderful work, please keep making them......Take care,. John. ( Belfast )
Great to watch you set a tree up for future development
Just love the work you do turning a tree into a bonsai thank you
You sure work hard having to sort 50 of them on their first stage to become bonsai trees, along with all the other work you have to do this time of year. Must come again to see what you have. Thanks Corin.
thank you i have two 43y old maples to prune in the next month so watching this gives me a better idea ..
Such a beautiful bonsai acer thanks corin keep up the good work mate thanks
Beautiful tree already !
Very interesting and informative - thank you
Thanks, very enjoyable and informative video.
Great future for this tree. Can’t wait for the update. Thanks for the inspiration 👩🏻🌾🌲🪴
I have watched Corrin over the years always a great watch from Dennis the butcher
Excellent lesson...
Thanks for another great video.
Lovely job and trees
Lovely job Corin, no mucking about 👍 would love a bonsai like that Cheers Aaron
Love to you Corin. Thanks for yet another brilliant video. Wishing you and your family a Happy Easter.
Thanks for another great informative video, it amazing how easy you make these things look, I can’t wait to see the progression and how this looks in the future 😜
Great video. Thanks.
Such a beautiful tree. Amazing is the ease that you do the pruning and the preparing for the bonsai pot. I am getting better as my bonsai years progress, but looking at you makes me bit jealous. Video was great👍👍👍
Another great video! I have put my new Premium Potting Stick to good use this spring, loving it!!
Thank you Corin🌳🌺
Lovely job
Thanks Corin, another excellent video presentation showing a little bit of everything!!!
Merci pour la vidéo!
Thanks for the video, from Spain, a good specimen, although what I personally do is wash the entire root ball with water, so I can see the roots better 👍👍👍
Thank you.
Nice work
Wow, another stunning video.
ı want to see these trees get watered too, its satisfying
Thanks for the video. I hope you make a follow up on that one.
If I lived near you I would work for free with any spare time I had, I love working on Bonsai. Fancy opening a shop in Bristol?
Hi guys great video as usual. Can I make a suggestion, when it comes to follow up video of the progress of a tree you have been working on. For a first time viewer to the channel they will have to search through future videos in the hope that they can find the video. You could drop a link into the description when you do the video or add an end screen.
@greenwoodbonsaistudio
19 күн бұрын
Great suggestion!
you should show the bald cypress again ! I love that tree
@greenwoodbonsaistudio
Жыл бұрын
I might do, its been re-potted and wired since it's last appearance. Will wait till it is in leaf
I watched the video until the end, congratulations for this excellent work!!! I will try to make a good video for my channel with your valuable advice!!!
Please tell us the grit and material of your grinder bit. Thank you! Wonderful video, as always. I learn something every time I watch. Do you have a page that lists your tools? You also used a small blue "chain saw" that I'm curious about.
Bravo
Any updates please . Love to see how the tree has leafed out
I am not the biggest fan of the field bent maples. I feel like trunk chops are the best way to put movement into the tree. Still this is a great demonstration.
buen trabajo y espero los próximos videos para ver como evoluciona después de ese trasplante, desde MAR DEL PLATA ARGENTINA
Que bueni👍👍
But I still think it would grow much better in rise krispies ]]]
From 5:50 on, grinding back into the trunk and sealing the wound, both things that should not be done if you like your tree healthy and give it a long life.
@greenwoodbonsaistudio
Жыл бұрын
I have done this to 100's of trees and they heal really well, smooth callous tissue over the entire area.
Miss your reggae interludes.
Well if you cant ship them to the US, maybe its time to open a Greenwood Bonsai in the US !!! lol. Never hurts to dream does it. 😊
Good tutorial! In earlier days, I had to find out the hard way after having a few Japanese Maples growing in my garden for a few years (before digging them out again). They really are very powerfull "growers". Luckily, they turn out to be very tolerant to quite harsh interventions too... Nice job, mister Corin! But I'm a bit amazed that they seem to answer so well to pure akadama at your place. I guess you have a lot of rain during the growing season?
@janegardener1662
Жыл бұрын
It's the UK, which is notorious for its wet and drizzly summers, although that might have changed since I lived there in the 60s and 70s.
Found my Acer Palmatum Sharps Pygmy root strangled as I kept it 2 years after purchase in the same pot, had to go abroad for a project. As bad as I found it the tree was def strangled before already. Started to chop the roots I realised quick there is hardly anything left once I finish. Took off only about 2/3rd of what would be required hoping the tree will survive. Added sphagnum moss around the bottom to aid root development. Any other tips from you guys would be appreciated…..
Thats a great tree, how old is this feild grown material, ?
@greenwoodbonsaistudio
Жыл бұрын
About 20 yr old
About the double stacked root, personally I would cut the bigger lower root because it wont help the tree get into shallow pot. Secondly that lower root is just too big it wont help the tree getting an evenly spreading nebari. In fact, cutting off that big root will encourage the smaller upper root to grow bigger. Third, that lower root is way below the nebari line, a little bit lower & it would be a tap root.
Powerful scissors those, what make are they?
Thank you for your good explanations and entertaining videos. I would like to see this tree how it looks this spring !
Whats the size of the large branch cutter? The largest one on the website are 208mm
Hi Corin, just curious, do you ever wash out the rootball with water? Great video again!
@greenwoodbonsaistudio
Жыл бұрын
Not often, as I tend to work inside and it makes a hell of a mess !
👍👌🙂🙂
Allowed to ship to Norway now?
So many good branches for cuttings end up in bin. [[[[
I wonder if you are using cornflakes for this re-pot
What you do about does tiny bugs in a young leaves?. Thank you so much.
@murray821
Жыл бұрын
Geen and black fly spray with soap and water. Leave it on a couple of minutes and rinse off. They sure love the sweet tree sap and zap the vigor out.
@rosanadancel7225
Жыл бұрын
@@murray821 thank you for this information,and immediate answer.
My trees are still going snap crackle and pop 😂
Double root would have made more unique interest. I would have left it.
Can't help but get a wallet ache when I see bonsai experts toss half a scoop of akadama next to the pot it needs to go into. I have a low income due to partial disability and I'm Dutch lol
I've never understood this method.. is this the same method that the Japanese use to develope their maples. I feel like it will always have a lot of scars no matter how long you try to let them heal and typically there shouldn't be any carving or deadwood on maples?? I'm saying this to say that I try to develope my maples over time with branch selection at times where the wounds will 100% heal. So my maples already look the way I want them to but they are just not as big as I'd like them. So they will keep the same shape and branches but over the years keep going into bigger snd bigger pots. Is your method only for rapid trunk growth and mass production? Or am I doing it wrong?
@greenwoodbonsaistudio
Жыл бұрын
The carving isn’t done to make deadwood. It’s carved back to get a cleaner better cut that will heal just like the cuts you do on your maples.
These maples have great movement, but not much taper, don’t you find that a problem? They look like they were shaped as a 1 meter few year old seedlings that were left to thicken up. Perhaps airlayer them in half and let a new leader grow. Don’t get me wrong, they are amazing trees. And in full leaf they would look stunning, but the lack of taper above the middle part bothers me.
@greenwoodbonsaistudio
Жыл бұрын
All are different, that's why it is important to reduce the thickness at the tops of them.
@murray821
Жыл бұрын
@@greenwoodbonsaistudio I see. The removal of the thick branches is a good tip thanks!
Foist
It’d be nicer material if they hadn’t put those bends in, looks too contrived for my taste. Nice video nonetheless
Hello and Thanks Corin for this Awesome Japanese Maple. Sad you Can’t Ship to America because our FDA are pains. But it’s ok to Have Open Borders for Bad People that Kill our Patriots but Bonsai Trees must Stay Out. 👍🏻 Love the Bonsai Pot with that tree can’t wait to see it.with Leafs
@janegardener1662
Жыл бұрын
FDA stands for "Food and Drug Administration". The USDA ("United States Department of Agriculture") controls the importation of trees into the United States because of its desire to keep exotic fungi and insects out of the US. It's a complicated process but it can be done. p.s I find it reprehensible that you think it's acceptable to impose your right wing political nonsense onto this gardening forum.
@plantdesigns7889
Жыл бұрын
It's to prevent invasive disease, insects, and plants from coming to the US. The blight that destroyed the American Chestnut was brought here from China. That is why they regulate produce and plants.
Flaws of the main tree that makes it unappealing to me : - the trunk curves are 2D, no depth in 3D - curves are excessive - bottom 2/3rd lacks trunk taper & looks more like a python than a tree trunk - root flare & surface roots are mediocre This problem is present in a few other trees also, seen around 1:43 Many Indonesian bonsai channels show how they create great surface roots & trunk taper. I maintain a playlist called Surface Roots / Trunk Taper, in case you want to know what my benchmark is