Working on field grown Trident maple bonsai material in Autumn
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
In this video Terry Erasmus demonstrates various approaches and techniques for working on field grown bonsai material, particularly Trident maples, in Autumn. The focus is on preparing material to be lifted in Spring, but also to take the next steps on material which is not yet ready to be lifted.
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Пікірлер: 91
you have some of the most detailed and educational videos related to developing bonsai
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thank you so much! That’s very kind of you 🙇🏼♂️
Hi Terry thank you for taking the time to share your experience much appreciated with Respect Bill W.
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
You bet Bill! It’s my passion. And once again, thank you for your very generous donation.
Trident mapla galore, I like a lot. Thank you.
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Glad you like it, it’s one of my favourite species to work with for sure!
Very interesting seeing the fall pruning techniques used on your trident maples. Some very lovely specimens you have there - just amazing!! Unbelievable how quickly those large wounds have healed - will definitely be trying similar with my trees. I guess that weed management is the less glamorous side of field growing that most of us don't think about. Looks like there is never a shortage of work for you to do!
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thank you Sue. Yes when you’re a bonsai grower there is always plenty of work to do especially wire on and then wire off work! 🤣 Thanks, yes, these trunks are getting there now and hopefully will soon move onto the next phase of their development.
I absolutely love your work with trident maples. I am taking notes to apply these techniques on a large Acer rubrum I collected this past spring. 👏🏽 🪴 🍁
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Wonderful, that’s the best compliment someone can pay me! 🙏🏻
Proses pembuatan bonsai yang indah. Salam kenal dari Indonesia
@TerryErasmusbonsai
14 күн бұрын
Terima kasih telah menonton. ya, dan saya paling menyukai prosesnya.
Love theses videos Terry.
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thanks so much Nathan! ☺️
Chào bạn , tôi cũng là một người yêu thích cây bonsai, tôi đến từ Việt Nam và rất vui khi được biết đến kênh của bạn , chúc bạn ngày mới tốt lành ❤
Awesome video Terry! Amazing trees you’ve got there
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it Andrew! Thanks so much for commenting.
Nice work Terry, tanks
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
It's wonderful, I also love trees like you, I also go to the forest to hunt trees
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
That’s great. Yamadori, or collected trees are very special. These trees are not wild though, I have been growing them for many years.
Great collection-massive trunks
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
great work... thank you
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Welcome! Thanks for watching 😎
Great Video Terry 👌🏻
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thanks 👍 Jerez. Trust you’re doing well.
@jerezindraj6723
Ай бұрын
😇🌲🍁🍂🌳🙏🏻
@jerezindraj6723
Ай бұрын
😇🌲🌳🍂🍁🙏🏻
Nice
@TerryErasmusbonsai
29 күн бұрын
Thank you. 🙏🏻
Wow. Nice trunks Terry. I'm drooling. Will definitely watch your site in Spring to see if any will come up for sale. Beautiful examples of how well a maple can heal its wounds. Great Video.
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thanks Stephen. That’s very kind, but you’re being modest because you certainly know how to develop some awesome field grown stuff yourself! Gotta love them Tridents though. Very forgiving when it comes to healing over scars and in my opinion the result makes for a much more interesting tree too.
Thanks!
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Bill, just wanted to express a sincere thank you for the donation. That the information was so useful to you is very humbling to me. Thank you 🙏🏻
Very cool Terry, I always learn a lot with your videos... You were crucial for my first trident maple development, and I'm loving to grow it on the ground, I only have space for one at the moment, but it definatelly worth the spot... You also helped me save that tree from a serious fungal issue. My maple is almost leafless here, didn't show much colors this year. I'm planning to lift the tree from the ground this year to work on it's base, but I'm insecure to cut the sacrifice branch now, could I wait a little more, like until mid winter?
@TerryErasmusbonsai
2 күн бұрын
Thank you so much, I am glad you have learnt something from some of my content. Field growing is truly awesome, well done. Actually it depends. If you want back budding then better to cut the sacrifice in late spring. If you don't need back budding then yes you can cut any time now till mid or late winter probably. Just bear in mind that if you do root work that the tree will take roughly 2 years to get back to the current energy level.
Thanks
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thank you so much Rikki, that is very kind of you! I appreciate it very much.
gran proyecto agradable compartir, interesante de ver, contenido interesante excelente presentación, excelente video, bueno para aprender cosas nuevas, todo lo mejor para usted
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Muchas gracias! Estoy contento de que el video te sea útil.
Thanks Terry, really great videos. Field grown maples are very rewarding, but don't you think sometimes the taper is a little excessive?
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thanks Massimiliano for your comment. This aesthetic is quite personal. I have some extremely chunky trunks and some very much less so. None that I would describe as feminine though. Excessive? No, I don’t think so but variety is the spice of life so one could definitely grow more feminine trunks too.
Keren👍, inspiratif, salam🙏🇮🇩
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Terima kasih banyak, itu pujian yang luar biasa. Menghargai itu.
@amingms9396
Ай бұрын
@@TerryErasmusbonsai sama" ang bos, salam satu hobi🙏☕
I would be interested to see how you get these large trunks out of the ground.
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
I see you did get the answer in the next videos. That’s great.
Great vidoe as always Terry ! Can tthe same be done/ Applied for potted developing trees ? This time of year for cutting back hard to produce tertiary branches ? Big structural change on an elm Cheers
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thanks so much! Best time is late spring for that. Now would be 2nd best and you will need to allow room for sap to recede.
Wonderful content Terry, how many years did you grow it before the first chop?
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thank you so much Tren, around 5 years at a guess. Depends on the tree and what it was started from.
Some beautiful trunks growing out in Somerset there Terry! 🤩Do you ever perform nemawashi on these trees or do you do all the root development once dug up and potted?
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Hi Wesley! Thanks buddy. No. I used to dig the trees every few years to cut the roots back but stopped. You lose a year of development if you do that. When I dig them, as you have seen, I cut all the roots off anyways. But it’s important to start with good roots ie a cutting or air layering to begin with.
👍👍
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thank you so much ☺️
❤❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉🎉
@TerryErasmusbonsai
21 күн бұрын
Thank you 🙇🏼♂️
Hi Terry. Thanks so much for your informative videos. Why is it that you didn't shaped the trunk chops at this time? Is it the wrong time of year or is it just that you had so much to do that day that you didn't have time for shaping the chops? Thanks!
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
I was waiting for someone to ask. Thank you. Sap is receding. If you shape a cut now the sap will recede even further away from the cut edge. So in my view the best time is latter part of spring when sap pressure is not too great that the cut bleeds, but when there is sap flow and callous formation can take place right where you shaped too.
@richardnathandaniels2534
Ай бұрын
@@TerryErasmusbonsai Awesome! That makes sense. Thanks so much!
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Good, I’m glad. Means I explained it properly then. 😊👍🏻
How many years were they in the ground? Great vid as always Thanks
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Roughly 15 years and longer from cutting.
Great content as always! How many years do you leave these tridents in the field before digging them on average and how old are they when you plant them in the field?
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thanks so much and good question! These are all on average 15 years plus from something around marker thickness if I recall (from cutting or seedling cutting). How long they can be left before digging depends on how big a tree I want as I have removed a bunch already a number of years ago as I wanted much smaller (in height) trees.
@DrSticktrick
Ай бұрын
@@TerryErasmusbonsai Thanks for you reply. I have started field growing different trees around 4 years ago.... so it'll take some more time I guess. :)
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
@DrSticktrick well I guess it depends on your objective but at least you have started! Good for you and good luck.
@DrSticktrick
Ай бұрын
@@TerryErasmusbonsai Thank you! :)
@Rev_Claud
Ай бұрын
Hi Terry thanks for your awesome content, I consistently follow it / you from all the way over here in London England. My question is what’s your thoughts on planting small bonsai and allowing them to develop? Have you ever tried it or thought about it and what would you say the pros and cons are?
Hi Terry, what is the best soil mix for thick trunk yamadori wild olives,and do you have any other tips for collecting wild olives.
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Sure Rafe, check out this blog I wrote: www.bonsaitree.co.za/blogs/tree-talk/8-tips-for-post-collection-care-of-wild-olives
are there any more gradual or mid-season techniques to use that avoid such massive chops
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Sure! Just cut the growth sooner instead of leaving it for a few years cut after one year. Scars are smaller but it will take much longer to get big trunks. If you watched till the end you would have seen that all the scars created in previous years are completely healed over. However whatever route you decide to follow is fine.
Good evening, what product do you use with the brush to close your cuts? A DIY product? thank you. Regards, john
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Thanks. It’s call Top Jin tree sealer and I introduce it near the beginning of the video.
Hi Terry, This video is full of information and I love it. I have one query. Which chemical or compound you use as cut paste coz I am not able find any with the name of cut paste in India I only get fundicide like copper oxychloride for cuts is that a substitute of cut paste if not please tell me the name of compound or chemical so that I can buy it. Thanks in advance!
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
The product I use is Top Jin sealer. I believe it’s a Japanese product. I import it from Japan anyways. You should be able to order it online yourself from Kaneshin tools online along with Karusmeito. We stock these products but don’t ship to India. Sorry I don’t know what chemical you can use.
@kapilkamboj8877
Ай бұрын
@@TerryErasmusbonsai thanks for yourbreply sir, keedp up the good work
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
@kapilkamboj8877 will do my best
is it autumn in South Africa?
@TerryErasmusbonsai
Ай бұрын
Yes it is. Late autumn.
The color of the leaves is red. What tree is it?
@TerryErasmusbonsai
22 күн бұрын
The trees with red leaves are Trident maple or Acer buergerianum
@BlissfulBonsai
21 күн бұрын
@@TerryErasmusbonsai in my area this plant doesn't exist
@TerryErasmusbonsai
21 күн бұрын
@BlissfulBonsai that is interesting because it’s very widespread around the world. Where do you live ?
(トップジンm paste) is very good. I use it too.(´∀`*)