Thanks for watching, much appreciated. I'm enjoying making the videos. I love tree talk too, and seeing what others are up to. I've gotten a lot of my inspiration from others' UA-cam videos, and wanted to share my two cents.
Thanks! It's unique if nothing else. After I shoved the mugo in there, I honestly thought it was for sure going to die. But a few months in, and it's growing! I'm shocked. I got concerned about keeping it watered during July and August, so I buried the rock a couple inches in my garden box to ride out the heat.
That was great. You have a lot going on there! Most everything I have is in nursery pots. I definitely need to try getting some of my trees in the ground.
Thanks! I recommend ground growing if you're able - trees are easier to keep watered and they generally grow better/faster. You do lose some control - more exposed to adverse weather, animals, kid soccer balls, etc.
What a lovely little collection! Keep it up, would love to see some propagation videos ( idk what I am doing wrong, can't propagate from cuttings. Used rooting hormone keept in shade, moist...never any luck...might need a new perspective)
Thank you! I do plan to do a cutting propagation video in the future, as I would like to take some Japanese Maple and ficus cuttings this year. It sounds like you are doing many things right. Some things you might also try are 1) keeping the air around cuttings humid with a plastic bag (but keep in shade so you don't fry them), 2) experimenting with soft, semi-hard, and hard cuttings for each species, 3) keeping at different temperatures. Sometimes they take a long time - I found that to be especially true for some thuja cuttings - I think it took after least half a year before I got a semi-hardwood thuja cutting to root successfully.
Keep the videos coming, really enjoy watching people's work and opinions on the bonsai community.
Thanks for watching, much appreciated. I'm enjoying making the videos. I love tree talk too, and seeing what others are up to. I've gotten a lot of my inspiration from others' UA-cam videos, and wanted to share my two cents.
Great trees! Thanks for the tour!
Thank you!
That little Mugo rock is awesome bro! 👏🏽
Thanks! It's unique if nothing else. After I shoved the mugo in there, I honestly thought it was for sure going to die. But a few months in, and it's growing! I'm shocked. I got concerned about keeping it watered during July and August, so I buried the rock a couple inches in my garden box to ride out the heat.
That was great. You have a lot going on there! Most everything I have is in nursery pots. I definitely need to try getting some of my trees in the ground.
Thanks! I recommend ground growing if you're able - trees are easier to keep watered and they generally grow better/faster. You do lose some control - more exposed to adverse weather, animals, kid soccer balls, etc.
great tour, some cool trees there.
Thank you for watching! Same to you - I've seen and enjoyed several of your videos now, and just subscribed.
@@BonsaiNorthwest thanks man. Same 😁
안녕하세요 저는대한민국에서분재나무을키우고있습니다.영상을잘감상을했습니다,그리고감사합니다😊🤗👍👏👏👏
Hi, thanks for tuning in all the way from Korea! Glad you enjoyed the tour.
Great trees! I love the flowering quinces in the garden box!
Thank you! Cheers!
What a lovely little collection!
Keep it up, would love to see some propagation videos ( idk what I am doing wrong, can't propagate from cuttings. Used rooting hormone keept in shade, moist...never any luck...might need a new perspective)
Thank you! I do plan to do a cutting propagation video in the future, as I would like to take some Japanese Maple and ficus cuttings this year. It sounds like you are doing many things right. Some things you might also try are 1) keeping the air around cuttings humid with a plastic bag (but keep in shade so you don't fry them), 2) experimenting with soft, semi-hard, and hard cuttings for each species, 3) keeping at different temperatures. Sometimes they take a long time - I found that to be especially true for some thuja cuttings - I think it took after least half a year before I got a semi-hardwood thuja cutting to root successfully.