I literally just did this today. Found a nice Juniper with some crazy branch curls for $9 at Home Depot. Took a couple of hours to clean it up, remove all the dead stuff & prune out all the overgrowth. The trunk was perfect underneath with about 6 or 7 nice horizontal leads coming off with no center. Wired it up & got a nice glazed bonsai pot for $9. It turned out spectacular & looks like a wind swept ocean tree. I saw some bonsai junipers at my local bonsai nursery that were half the size for $179-$200. Total cost for mine was less than $25 including everything. I love shopping the big stores for bargains I can turn into nice bonsai.
This was a good video! I think the big takeaway for me is how ridiculous it is that places try to sell really juvenile juniper cuttings as "bonsai" for like $50.
And ppl buy them and display on Facebook bonsai groups as finished bonsai with captions like even tho it's winter I'm putting moss spores so it'll moss up nicely in a month or two and I don't need to style at all since it's already a bonsai .meanwhile the tree looks like a whip wired into a question mark .
The funniest part is if you take that $50 and buy a couple of landscaping trees that are juveniles, with a little work, you are often closer to a respectable bonsai and you get a few for the same price. Only new bonsai enthusiasts think bonsai is about a completed tree rather than the long journey towards perfection.
@@IgnacioAtenas The whole concept of Bonsai is to create and follow rules that are meant for guide lines. Anyone can go out an buy a "Bonsai" but its the creation from ones one mind and hands that set people apart.
@@musicointempero2256 Funny thing is you can buy a respectable sized tree in a large pot for about £20. You get the advantage then of a thicker trunk and you can take lots of cuttings. £50 is too much for a juvenile that's not well developed. Mind you, I'd pay £50 or much much more if it's well developed and the person clearly has taken care and knows what they're doing
I liked the process and the result. You are one of the few who styles conifers in a natural way. And I missed having breakfast with your videos. You're great, dear Nigel
I like the foliage on that juniper. It reminds me of that of your cedars. Excellent start, can't wait to see how it grows over the next year (and beyond!)
This is true serendipity. You went looking for a group of Thujas and found a wonderful juniper. If it prospers, that tree is going to be a high point of your collection.
I should have gone to see the nurseries before the outdoor plant section closed... This video didn't help a bit! I want to prune something!!! :D The trunkline is very nice, can't wait to see future updates on this lil fella!
I wish I could share pics of my clearance junipers. They were $9.99 superior junipers. I was inspired by a Dragon tattoo I had seen. It now looks like dragons talons in a wind swept styling. Your videos are quite enjoyable Nigel. Thanks for sharing your gardens. From somewhere in the midwest, 🇺🇸 between Chicago and Milwaukee.
I am really interested to watch a juniper develop as clip and grow. Only ever see it as a wired plant, so this will be fun to see over the coming years - assuming it lives!
Awesome. I love junipers and have killed my fair share. I know now a lot more. I just cannot buy one in summer and repot and prune in hot temps. Being in cool climate provides lots of freedom. Love your channel And your bonsai style.
Ive only ever seen Junipers with wire for days, so im super keen to see how a clip and grow approach works on this species! Good work Nigel, good tree for $12 😁👍
Great start to a new project, Nigel! Be careful in the future with cutting the foliage. I would not touch that juniper for a year at least. Intense pruning will get you juvenile foliage (similar to normal needle juniper foliage) and it's hard to get the mature (cedar like foliage) back. Also junipers have a lot of growth hormones in the tips of the branches, intense pinching will weaken the tree. I've started almost 2 years ago a 'blue chip' juniper, extremely similar to yours, and I've cut a lot at once and a year and a half later it still has the juvenile foliage produced as a reaction to my lack of knowledge.
Some juniper's mature foliage stay quite spikey depending on the variety. for instance, Blue Star juniper will never develop that soft mature foliage. It will take very long for it to develop for things like Procumbens, and Eastern Red Cedar (Juniperus Virginiana). There's also varieties that will grow mature foliage very easily like Juniperus Chinensis, and San Jose Junipers that produce mature foliage very easily compared to others. There are a lot of factors that go into it, but it's mainly about the ratio of foliage to roots, which is something you should wait until you get to a point closer to the refinement stage, after you have already developed it to the design you had in mind for the tree. Also, pruning off the tips of the branches is good for encouraging back budding, which can be very useful, depending on what you want the tree to do. He definitely did the right thing in my opinion as far as pruning off that much foliage. You don't want the tree wasting it's resources on branches you aren't going to keep (other than letting sacrificial branches grow to help make the tree thicker.)
@@yung_bonsai I 100% agree that Nigel did a great job with the initial styling! As you said, there is a fine equilibrium between the roots and the foliage when it comes to junipers. I've listened to Bjorn's podcast, Bonsai Network, and he cited a study about the balance of root hormones and growth hormones (that helps the foliage direct itself towards the light, regulate a bunch of things etc.) . His conclusion was that you should definitely not hedge prune your juniper to shape. And also, junipers have an evolutionary response to big amounts of foliage gone missing at once. It is believed that the juvenile foliage is a form of self-preservation against wild animals. Disclaimer: I am a noobie when it comes to horticulture but I try to learn from where I can.
Best video I've seen yet, I'm 60 and going to try my first tree, find an old hippy if you want to do it right. None of the others went into finding the base of the root. Peace.
Awesome video Nigel. I just bought a gold juniper and did a Bonzai with it. This video helped me to learn to trim for structure. I will be starting my own videos soon, hope to see a view from you!
Metode ini sangat bermanfaat, saya banyak belajar dari itu, terima kasih banyak dengan tips yang diberikan tuan, salam satu hoby, jabat persahabatan dan berkarya adalah Seni 🙏😊☕
I notice you pass on a lot of opportunities to make jin/deadwood on this juniper. Is there a design reason? Personal one? Not there yet? Thank you from a Bonsai White Belt
2 or 3 years ago, I got what was sold to me as a "Japanese Garden Juniper " don't know if that's a real thing but I planted it in the garden and it's doing great. It's growing nicely.
Great stuff can be accomplished from raw material, a few nice opportunities missed to create “shari” and “Jin” from the initial trim, but a great video nonetheless. Thank you for sharing
Nice work Nigel. I've been looking for some decent nursery stock and so much of it here in the US is over priced. I did find Blue Star juniper for $10 but was looking for a Sand Cherry. I better go back for the Blue Star but thanks for the video. What you're doing is exactly what I will be doing and with you vocalizing the process really helps me..
Looks great. Thats a hell of alot of stored energy you removed though, I doubt it will do much for a very long time. Junipers store the energy in their foliage rather than in their roots or super structure. I'm pretty sure he knows this but others might not. Sometimes when designing junipers you have to leave some branches with foliage on that you want to remove to be removed at a later date if you have taken alot off already. The tree will recover its energy stores quicker and start growing sooner, correcting the root to foliage ratio. Sometimes you have to do it just so the plant will survive. It hard cos you want it looking good from the off but you can remove it later and you will be much further along.
@@DOOMBASSIST4 'Pretty sure' i said in my comment that he knows this 'lol'. An that it was for others such as new comers to bonsai, even if I hadn't said it outright in my comment I would of thought that was obvious 'lol'
@@DOOMBASSIST4 yea cos talking about how different plants store energy is a flex... It was info I didn't know when I first started and is pretty helpful.
Isn’t it a little late for so much pruning? Will it stress it for the winter? Will you put it in one of your greenhouses to protect it? Do you ever wire anything?
Hi Nigel, another excellent vid. Thank you. I'm just starting my journey with junipers this year. How does one tell how old a nursery juniper is? Rough guess-timation.
I literally just did this today. Found a nice Juniper with some crazy branch curls for $9 at Home Depot. Took a couple of hours to clean it up, remove all the dead stuff & prune out all the overgrowth. The trunk was perfect underneath with about 6 or 7 nice horizontal leads coming off with no center. Wired it up & got a nice glazed bonsai pot for $9. It turned out spectacular & looks like a wind swept ocean tree. I saw some bonsai junipers at my local bonsai nursery that were half the size for $179-$200. Total cost for mine was less than $25 including everything. I love shopping the big stores for bargains I can turn into nice bonsai.
I just did the same. It was a fun project
This was a good video!
I think the big takeaway for me is how ridiculous it is that places try to sell really juvenile juniper cuttings as "bonsai" for like $50.
And ppl buy them and display on Facebook bonsai groups as finished bonsai with captions like even tho it's winter I'm putting moss spores so it'll moss up nicely in a month or two and I don't need to style at all since it's already a bonsai .meanwhile the tree looks like a whip wired into a question mark .
The funniest part is if you take that $50 and buy a couple of landscaping trees that are juveniles, with a little work, you are often closer to a respectable bonsai and you get a few for the same price.
Only new bonsai enthusiasts think bonsai is about a completed tree rather than the long journey towards perfection.
That's why I buy in regular shops, not bonsai shops
@@IgnacioAtenas The whole concept of Bonsai is to create and follow rules that are meant for guide lines. Anyone can go out an buy a "Bonsai" but its the creation from ones one mind and hands that set people apart.
@@musicointempero2256 Funny thing is you can buy a respectable sized tree in a large pot for about £20. You get the advantage then of a thicker trunk and you can take lots of cuttings. £50 is too much for a juvenile that's not well developed.
Mind you, I'd pay £50 or much much more if it's well developed and the person clearly has taken care and knows what they're doing
I like how slow & methodical you are ,for a beginner like myself it’s much appreciated.😊
I always enjoy listening to you describe your thought process, Nigel. That was a good find!
Nice little starter tree, a good explanation of every cut. Thanks Nigel
It's so facinating to see your work in progress, I still found myself holding my breath.
"im not removing any live material"
Proceeds to take half the tree off 🤣
classic Nigel, love it!
Nigel has the perfect hair for bonsai. All kidding aside, thanks for the great videos.
That bush sure looks like a tree now! I am sure it will survive without trouble.
Totally saw this as a potential cascade...then he cut that branch...sigh. Be interesting to see where this ends up.
It's doing well, I'm taking it slow on the styling, trying not to reduce it too much at once.
I liked the process and the result. You are one of the few who styles conifers in a natural way. And I missed having breakfast with your videos. You're great, dear Nigel
1:50 "all I"ll be doing is scraping the surface soil"
. . . 35:25 "pretty well doing a full repot here, aren't I?". Gotta love it!
I like the foliage on that juniper. It reminds me of that of your cedars.
Excellent start, can't wait to see how it grows over the next year (and beyond!)
Yes I love the blue tint of the junipers. Very pretty
I thought that looked like a challenging tree, but like usual you made it look easy and turned a $12 tree into a little beauty
This is true serendipity. You went looking for a group of Thujas and found a wonderful juniper. If it prospers, that tree is going to be a high point of your collection.
Nice Job! I love this project and seeing you take a simple nursery tree and give it new life as a Bonsai. Impressive!
Thank you for inspiring me to attempt making bonsai with junipers. I have two that I'm currently working my nerve to work on.
Very rare to see a juniper go through clip and grow. Excellent results actually 👍
I should have gone to see the nurseries before the outdoor plant section closed... This video didn't help a bit! I want to prune something!!! :D
The trunkline is very nice, can't wait to see future updates on this lil fella!
I wish I could share pics of my clearance junipers. They were $9.99 superior junipers. I was inspired by a Dragon tattoo I had seen. It now looks like dragons talons in a wind swept styling. Your videos are quite enjoyable Nigel. Thanks for sharing your gardens. From somewhere in the midwest, 🇺🇸 between Chicago and Milwaukee.
I loved this video, starting from scratch! Thanks Nigel
Knowing where to start is such a difficult part great tutorial nigel.
Looking good. Always a lot of branches on a juniper. It cleared out nicely.
I am really interested to watch a juniper develop as clip and grow. Only ever see it as a wired plant, so this will be fun to see over the coming years - assuming it lives!
I seen a beautiful cascading juniper. You kept on hacking away thinking about the future when you had a beautiful one in the right here & now
Looks like a great foundation to build from, Nigel! Great video!
Great investment of time and money in this Juniper. Well done!
Not bad, clipping it back without wiring is always good for new branch growth.
That will mature nicely.
Nigel, that came out well. You hit the jackpot with that trunk.
Nice job, its looking tree like already. It will be exciting watching this tree develop. 👍
Nice juniper bonsai,thank you for sharing mr.
Awesome. I love junipers and have killed my fair share. I know now a lot more. I just cannot buy one in summer and repot and prune in hot temps. Being in cool climate provides lots of freedom. Love your channel
And your bonsai style.
My dude! You did it! You got a Juniper going, I love it!!
Really like watching these Nigel and going back from your updates.
I got golden cypress and golden juniper the first of October. $10 each. They are pretty but I'm still struggling to design one of them.
Incredible transformation! Always a pleasure to watch your videos. Absolutely wonderful
Ive only ever seen Junipers with wire for days, so im super keen to see how a clip and grow approach works on this species! Good work Nigel, good tree for $12 😁👍
Great start to a new project, Nigel! Be careful in the future with cutting the foliage. I would not touch that juniper for a year at least. Intense pruning will get you juvenile foliage (similar to normal needle juniper foliage) and it's hard to get the mature (cedar like foliage) back. Also junipers have a lot of growth hormones in the tips of the branches, intense pinching will weaken the tree. I've started almost 2 years ago a 'blue chip' juniper, extremely similar to yours, and I've cut a lot at once and a year and a half later it still has the juvenile foliage produced as a reaction to my lack of knowledge.
Some juniper's mature foliage stay quite spikey depending on the variety. for instance, Blue Star juniper will never develop that soft mature foliage. It will take very long for it to develop for things like Procumbens, and Eastern Red Cedar (Juniperus Virginiana). There's also varieties that will grow mature foliage very easily like Juniperus Chinensis, and San Jose Junipers that produce mature foliage very easily compared to others. There are a lot of factors that go into it, but it's mainly about the ratio of foliage to roots, which is something you should wait until you get to a point closer to the refinement stage, after you have already developed it to the design you had in mind for the tree. Also, pruning off the tips of the branches is good for encouraging back budding, which can be very useful, depending on what you want the tree to do. He definitely did the right thing in my opinion as far as pruning off that much foliage. You don't want the tree wasting it's resources on branches you aren't going to keep (other than letting sacrificial branches grow to help make the tree thicker.)
@@yung_bonsai I 100% agree that Nigel did a great job with the initial styling! As you said, there is a fine equilibrium between the roots and the foliage when it comes to junipers. I've listened to Bjorn's podcast, Bonsai Network, and he cited a study about the balance of root hormones and growth hormones (that helps the foliage direct itself towards the light, regulate a bunch of things etc.) . His conclusion was that you should definitely not hedge prune your juniper to shape. And also, junipers have an evolutionary response to big amounts of foliage gone missing at once. It is believed that the juvenile foliage is a form of self-preservation against wild animals.
Disclaimer: I am a noobie when it comes to horticulture but I try to learn from where I can.
Good to know. But too late as ive just chopped the hell out of a juni last week.. oops.
Maybe ill bury it in my garden for a year and let it go wild.
What a wonderful find the tree 🌳 really was it weight in gold so beautiful.
Thank you, Nigel. Pondering now what it is going to look like in a few years time.
Wow Reduced to a tiny little tree. But a powerful looking little tree. So cute! Love the music at the end
Best video I've seen yet, I'm 60 and going to try my first tree, find an old hippy if you want to do it right. None of the others went into finding the base of the root. Peace.
Awesome video Nigel. I just bought a gold juniper and did a Bonzai with it. This video helped me to learn to trim for structure. I will be starting my own videos soon, hope to see a view from you!
Metode ini sangat bermanfaat, saya banyak belajar dari itu, terima kasih banyak dengan tips yang diberikan tuan, salam satu hoby, jabat persahabatan dan berkarya adalah Seni 🙏😊☕
Great work Nigel, it leaves an idea how the tree will gonna look like in the future!
I ll do one like that soon.
Greetings from Portugal!
I notice you pass on a lot of opportunities to make jin/deadwood on this juniper. Is there a design reason? Personal one? Not there yet?
Thank you from a Bonsai White Belt
There's some real nice sweeping motion there now. You were wise in not cutting that off, but eliminating the rest.
When I first started the video I thought “okay, I’m prepared to see him turn this into a nub” 🤣
I am really looking forward to updates on this one.. looks spectacular already!
Great Video! Would be great if you did this with other trees you can buy from the store.
looks like a sea green juniper chinesis btw. i got one that looked damn similar
i thoroughly enjoyed this repot!
Great job Nigel ! That is a great looking Juniper! 👌
2 or 3 years ago, I got what was sold to me as a "Japanese Garden Juniper " don't know if that's a real thing but I planted it in the garden and it's doing great. It's growing nicely.
@@snowbumenzo thank you
Nice find. I've tried to find these numerous times and around my area, junipers with that much branch mass have wimpy trunks like a pinky finger.
Love this . Excellent ! Wish i could see what it looks like now
I have recently posted the second pruning!!!!
Thanks for sharing this wonderful clipping
man i cant wait to be able to get into outdoor bonsai like this one, love what you did to it
This seems to have been veeeery fun!
I was thinking for 20 min. Nigel is going to do a semi cascade. But i like. Can see the potenial. Great trunk on it😀
Great stuff can be accomplished from raw material, a few nice opportunities missed to create “shari” and “Jin” from the initial trim, but a great video nonetheless. Thank you for sharing
Finaly a juniper i love em
Looks very nice. I have a few trees that look very similar to this one, without wiring.
Thank you for a wonderful bonsai video, Nigel! :)
nice bonsai master 👍👍 salam semangat
Nice video Nigel! I got a few junipers in my own collection, really like to work with them. Seeing this video makes me want to buy more of them haha.
Beautiful job, Ide like to think I could do the same but I doubt that😂. This gave me a lot of inspiration so thank you.
I will get me one of those, looks like an interesting project
When I'm not looking at my tv I sometimes forget you're not Steve Carrell doing botanical work.
Nice work Nigel. I've been looking for some decent nursery stock and so much of it here in the US is over priced. I did find Blue Star juniper for $10 but was looking for a Sand Cherry. I better go back for the Blue Star but thanks for the video. What you're doing is exactly what I will be doing and with you vocalizing the process really helps me..
Awesome video Nigel, thank you.
Nice . Cool end result on a cheap tree
Super Lauik bravo
I missed the live stream, but at least I can have lunch with you Nigel again today! 😃
you and I both
@@MaybeBonsai you’re buying! 😉
Great video Nigel What a relief there was no s bend shapes Or Cascade
No jins, no shari, no wiring, no new angle? This is new to me. Can’t wait to see it next year.
Nice buy Nigel!! Great price
This was just what I was looking for thanks allot for this video.
Thanks Nigella great video
Nigel, your mane is wonderful..have you been pruning your hair for ramification?
One of my favourite garden centres sells their shrubs of all types for 5 dollars at the end of season best deal of the year
That turned out fantastic!
Looks great. Thats a hell of alot of stored energy you removed though, I doubt it will do much for a very long time. Junipers store the energy in their foliage rather than in their roots or super structure. I'm pretty sure he knows this but others might not. Sometimes when designing junipers you have to leave some branches with foliage on that you want to remove to be removed at a later date if you have taken alot off already. The tree will recover its energy stores quicker and start growing sooner, correcting the root to foliage ratio. Sometimes you have to do it just so the plant will survive. It hard cos you want it looking good from the off but you can remove it later and you will be much further along.
Pretty sure nigel knows what he's doing lol
@@DOOMBASSIST4 'Pretty sure' i said in my comment that he knows this 'lol'. An that it was for others such as new comers to bonsai, even if I hadn't said it outright in my comment I would of thought that was obvious 'lol'
Nah you were trying to flex :)
@@DOOMBASSIST4 yea cos talking about how different plants store energy is a flex... It was info I didn't know when I first started and is pretty helpful.
Thankyou I cut Mt first 2 juniper back hard so hopefully they'll survive
Looks like wind swept style when you bought it.
Looks so awesome!
It is great .
I want ask you about the fertilizer . what was ?
Hello Nigel
Most of the junipers from a garden center are from cuttings, so they don't have not real 'rootbase'.
Nice work anyway!
grts
Kennet
Thanks Kennet, yes you can tell they are cuttings by the immature roots from the base of the trunk! Easy money for the nurseries!
Isn’t it a little late for so much pruning? Will it stress it for the winter? Will you put it in one of your greenhouses to protect it? Do you ever wire anything?
Looks great Nigel🌲
Nigel the juniper looks quite like your hair sometimes
Hello Nigel, it looks good. Nice work.
Man I wish I had a Polly house right now!!!! Just worried for my trees outside, I hope I do alright this winter!!
Can you show any finished junipers in your collection thanks
Great Work Nigel 😃👍🏽🥰
Cool little tree for twelve bucks. N I C E 1.
Nicely done…especially for $12 👏
Really nice tree Nigel! $12 well spend 😉
Hi Nigel, another excellent vid. Thank you. I'm just starting my journey with junipers this year. How does one tell how old a nursery juniper is? Rough guess-timation.
You can try counting the rings on a branch you cut of, it gives you the age of the branch at least!
Very informative thank you
Wow might just buy another juniper soon