Thank you for this video. Not thirty minutes ago, I confirmed our family’s ginkgo tree (which was approximately 50 years old, with a wide trunk) has died. Likely from a root bacteria; it was fine last year and showed no signs of disease- this year, it is June, not a single bud and the branches are all brittle. One of the saddest sights I have seen, as this tree holds many, many fond memories of growing up, bonds with family, and the lifecycle of our only cat. I am able to hold some small hope that I can get a ginkgo bonsai one day.
Peter I was working in a Monastery in London 40 yrs ago and in the court yard was a Ginko the size of a fully grown Horse chestnut, I had never seen one before it was awesome, lucky I went to a Bonsai seller in cheshire at the same time who had two in the back of his green house quickly bought one still have it today 12" high with a 1" nebari but this year was the best i have ever seen it, a lovely tree to have in a collection👍. I bet that female Ginko quickly came of the benches😂
Also a very interesting species which is considered a "living fossil", since it's the only remnant of an ancient family dating 270 million years ago (Permian period) :0
@@LiveLife1DayatATimee We had females planted in our shopping centers. Needless to say, in autumn the center stank of dog droppings, and noone knew it were the fruits :P
Hi Peter I have grown very fond in the art of bonsai ever since I came across your videos six months ago, I live in Wellington New Zealand and have collected ,air layered and propergated so many plants that my wife is running out of patience with me and wants me to move next door lol , thank you for the inspiration and colorful plants and shirts hehe . My question is ,can you air layer a qinko tree ? Thanks again keep well and be safe.
Thank you for such a beautiful video! My family has a ginkgo biloba in our farm in Brazil and I love that plant! My mother did only one new tree from the stick and their seeds never germinate! I always wanted to do a bonsai with it, but unfortunately I could not until now! Your ginkgos are wonderful!!! Congratulations!!!
Wow! Science class back in 1969-1970, my teacher told us there were no male gingkos, only female. I was saddened at the thought. Our schoolgrounds had several large 50-60 foot gingkos. I am so happy to know that we still have both male and female gingkos.
Most often reputable growers graft from known cultivars of male trees onto rootstock in order to produce trees that one can be Confident are male trees. After the Blandy Experiment, it is now known that the ratio of male to female trees grown from seed is close to 50:50. In fact, when looked at through statistics....the difference is not scientifically significant. Unfortunately, there are still some growers that will sell you a tree grown from seed and swear it is male or female before it ha reached 15to 20 years old....the age at which ginkgoes express gender. Naturally, those of us interested in bonsai usually could care less about ginkgo gender.
Notice that there were slitted and unslitted leaves on the same tree. I haven't noticed a different ratio between male and female trees, but it might be true. What I have noticed is that the leaves that grow out on the edge of branches, from apical buds with long internodes, tend to not have the slit, while leaves that grow from the small internoded leafing points further back tend to have the slit.
I love your tutorials Peter, they are always very learn full, so that you for the effort. another interesting fact is that the where the first trees to go back green again after the Hiroshima bom. These trees are still alive today, and there for the Ginkgo is also know as the pease trees, what a Wonderfull name for this majestic tree…
Sat in bed watching this brilliant video. Knowing I have 2 potted ginko in the garden. Can't wait to check the leaves in the spring to see if they are male or female.
I’m so glad you uploaded this video Peter. I bought a tall ginkgo (raw material) from a nursery lately and dont know what to do with it. It is a meter high and the trunk is about a finger thick. Should I keep growing it tall or should i cut down the main trunk by half and thicken the trunk?? I live in Australia and its the end of spring here. My ginkgo has lots of green foliage now. Your specialized knowledge would be greatly appreciated... thank you in advance.
You can air layer it if you wish - Ginkgos air layer easily. But if you dont want to do that then cut it down to the height you want and make it a bonsai. It should force side shoots to grow.
I had a friend that worked in landscaping, he gifted my with a ginko I so loved, lost it, but it, and the dawn redwood are the long livers it seems and are my favorites, which kind of surprises me because I like to style things. Thanks for this video, that female is a beauty!
Love the shirt! I bought a ginko from you recently. It's a while off being a good size for bonsai but I'm looking forward to working on it in a few years!
I think I was one of the people who wanted to see more about Ginkgo trees. Thank you for the little tour and helpful information about the Ginkgo. Very interesting. It seems to be a difficult species for Bonsai, but I'll try my best to keep mine healthy.
I have a ginko that has gone through some tough times: storm, hanging basket falling on it, top broken off, ... but it is alive and well, made many new leaves and is not in the mood yet for fall colours!
i knew that they had both a male and female tree separately but i didnt know that the female were rare, thank you for that bit of info, be strong, be safe, and be blessed
what is the best time to take a cutting from a gingko tree to root it for making a bonsai. How long should the cutting be. I just love your you tube videos on bonsai. Cathy
Soft wood cuttings are when the new shoots harden and this is in June in UK. Hardwood cuttings are done in Autumn but these are more difficult to make and need strong hormone liquid or it wont root.
Gingko is one of my favorite trees. I was very happy when i first saw one. It was in spring so it was green. There's a lot of them here in Missouri. Came Fall and they turned yellow. Soooo beautiful. The green leaf i kept was male with a slit in the middle. The one i saw in Fall is female (i only found out because of this vid). I thought it looks weird because it didn't have the slit but turned out it was rare? Awesome. ❤️❤️ My question. Will the male and female both produce seeds? Im guessing only the female does but i need confirmation. Lol. The seeds stinks so bad that i want the male tree if they don't produce seeds.
I enjoy watching your videos, very informative and easy to follow! I love your Hawaiian shirts, reminds me so much of home...Guam. I currently live in Birmingham, Alabama.
You forgot to mention the most beautiful fall colors of the always admired Peterus Chanis tree! Just look at it! Lol nice outfit, sir, but no matter how much you try, you'll always be upstaged by your trees! Sorry to disappoint. Very nice video. Have you ever tried to make an eucalyptus bonsai? I have a couple of them. I enjoy their smells when I play with them.
I am running out of nice shirts. Have to keep using my old ones. Eucalyptus dont usually make nice bonsai but here in the UK, there aren't many Eucalypts that have small enough leaves, so I haven't tried them much. I guess in Australia you have a wide choice.
@@peterchan3100 I I only jest about your attire, sir. I'm from California, and we also have an abundance of eucalyptus here. True, I'm learning, they don't or I haven't seen any that are in the traditional style of bonsai. I have much to learn about the specifics of bonsai. I find my enjoyment with botany in more of a general sense and am an "old hand" at it if you will. But new to bonsai. Thank you, sir, for breathing new life into an old love, so to speak. Peace be with you.
I watched your video and this inspired me to grow my young ginko into a bonsai, the young ginko is about 27 inches tall with a quite thin trunk, not much branching yet. When can you start growing a ginko as a bonsai, what are the criteria? Kind regards from Germany
Hi Peter. Thanks another great video. Question: given the difficulty of getting Ginkgo to produce side branches, is there anything that can be done to encourage / increase the generation of suckers?
In order to help encourage branching and keep the tree shorter, I cut current growth (once it has dropped its leaves) back to two nodes and try to pick an outward-facing bud. For those as intrigued as I am with Ginkgo biloba, please take a look at Cor Kwant’s “The Ginkgo Pages” on the internet. It is simply amazing.
I worked with a grower in the states, hr specializes in deciduous bonsai. He shared some of the knowledge he has learned regarding ginkgo branching. He has found that keeping the soil ph between 6.5 & 7 will greatly encourage the trees to branch more readily. I have a dozen Ginkgo and it has worked well for my growing and propagation. Good luck.
I heard somewhere there is a cut paste manufactured in Japan that is very helpful in causing pruning wounds in Ginkgo to callous over. I think it has Gibberellic acid in it. Do you know the name of the product Peter?
fwiw, if you have any ALOE plants, they work very well on tree wounds.it also keeps bugs out until the wound has sealed itself.you just rub the gel right on the cuts and walk away.
Hello, Thank you for the video. Since I am a beginner in the bonsai world, I am wondering why the young ginko (around min 6) has it's lateral branches cut every year and not let them grow?
I love Ginkgo and bonsai however the only bonsai I have had have been 2 Ginkgo and they did not survive, I thought I just cannot keep bonsai alive but now I see it may have just been the fact that Ginkgo are not the best bonsai to keep. Guess I need to plant Ginkgo in the yard and bonsai a different kind of tree.
Nancy, I grow gingko from seed. There's a special dormancy the seeds have to achieve before they germinate in the spring. Fresh seeds or fruit you gather from the ground (where rubber gloves, fruit contains same compounds found in poison ivy oak and sumac) clean the flesh after soaking fruit for 2 day in water. Again wearing gloves you should be able to squeeze the fruit and the seed will easily slip free. I always give seeds a second rinse because nearly all botanical fruit contains growth inhibitors to prevent the seed from germinating in the fruit. So I give a second rinse then lay the seeds to dry. Once your seeds are dry your seeds need about 8 weeks of warmth where the seed continues to develop. After the 8 weeks of warmth you need to give them the remaining time until spring in the fridge in a ziploc bag. Then in spring once the ground has thawed sow them in the ground. If you live in a city that has an arborist you can call them and find out where there are female gingkos. Because of the special dormancy requirements of the seeds gingko rarely escapes cultivation. Best wishes and happy growing!
@@nancyfahey7518 I just collected some Ginkgo seeds in my nearby park in last years autumn, cleaned them thoroughly, then put them in the fridge until early spring, then put them in some pots. I didn't use any special soil or anything, so I'd say it's not really that complicated actually. I think at least 3/4 of the seeds grew into small plants this year. Good luck!
our gingkos dropped every single leaf over the course of one night - all still green. green carpet on the ground slowly turned yellow... when is the best time to take gingko cuttings? we have three trees (may be clones of each other) that I can take cuttings from -
In front of primary school that I have attended, there is still a female gynko. Yes it is stunning, high and almost golden in autumn. But I remember the smell of gynko nuts. Oh my.
Loved the video, however gingko trees are one of those plants that have non uniform leaves, and can have different shaped leaves throughout the tree, similar to mulberry and sassfras. So you cannot reliably sex a gingko tree by leaf only. The best way is to see in spring. Males produce pollen, females produce these pistil shaped nubs that are the female flowers. Females also produce a pretty but stinky fruit. There are instances where a tree might develop a different sexed branch, such as an a male tree having a single branch with fruit, but its very rare.
slightly disappointed :( but now I understand some of the challenges of growing ginkgo. one step at a time I suppose. going to make my first attempt at germinating seeds in the spring.
It's really easy to germinate them inside, just put in a bag some nuts with some moist sand and throw them in the fridge. After a month or two you will notice they all start to germinate, really easy to germinate. I noticed those I keep on my balcony and water every two days grow really fast, the ones planted outside in southern Romania grow veeeery slow, I assume because of the dry climate and watering only once a week instead of every two days.
Apply air layers in spring after the first flush hardens off. Use a strong rooting hormone on these layers to get them to callous and push roots. I’ve had it take 2 seasons for roots to form, so be patient. They root easily just slowly. Good luck.
I respect Peter Chan greatly for his knowledge, experience and expertise but I believe he is propagating a myth when he says you can determine Ginkgo biloba gender by the absence of a cleft in the leaves. Many times I have harvested ginkgo fruit from trees whose leaves contained a center cleft as well as trees whose leaves contained no cleft at all. There are many thoughts on how to best determine ginkgo gender based on plant morphology but, to the best of my knowledge after decades of exhausting research of the literature and first hand observation, the only way I can be sure of gender is by the presence of female flowers or male flowers on the tree. As you may know these flowers do not appear until the tree is 15 years old or older. It is my understanding from the literature that there is an electrophoresis test that can determine gender from leaf material at any age of the plant but it is too expensive to run on a routine basis...so far.
My experience of this aspect ie Gender - is based on what Japanese growers have told me. As I have never had my Ginkgos produce seed I cannot vouch for it. Besides - on some Ginkgo plants - they have both types of leaves (with slit and without), so what does that tell you? DNA and other tests are not within the reach of poor farmers and growers - but thanks for drawing attention to this topic.
peter chan ...very true. I hope that researchers will one day make an affordable kit that will allow those interested to determine their ginkgoes’ gender earlier than 15 years. Thank you for your rapid reply and thank you for your interesting and informative videos. I am constantly recommending them to my bonsai-loving colleagues.
Ginko sex ratio is 1:1 and although they tend to be separate in sex, branches on trees have been known to spontaneously change to the opposite sex 😊. Fascinating tree
Interesting about leaf shape. Here in the US, I've always heard that the only way to tell a female was if it produced seeds, & they are rare because the seeds are so stinky. So people avoid planting them. Supposedly, the males are cloned & this is a problem for genetic diversity. I know where several local female trees are, & collected seeds & leaves this year. As you say, they are rounded.
Exatly. And I couldn't find anything about it on the internet. In fact both male and female trees appear to have leaf variation: with and without the slit. Female trees are rarer to find because obviously there's not much demand for female trees due to the smell of the fruit, but I actually live near a park that has a female tree (and it indeed smeells like putrid meat when the fruits are on the ground)
Not really. I’m just starting out with ginkgoes. The one I air layered is a branch from a Princeton sentinel which was hanging over the sidewalk so it had to be removed anyway. This variety throws out a lot of branches so I am hoping it will make a good bonsai,
I love how you keep producing new video's with new topics, I really can't get enough of them and allready look forward to the next one! Thank you
Thank you for this video. Not thirty minutes ago, I confirmed our family’s ginkgo tree (which was approximately 50 years old, with a wide trunk) has died. Likely from a root bacteria; it was fine last year and showed no signs of disease- this year, it is June, not a single bud and the branches are all brittle. One of the saddest sights I have seen, as this tree holds many, many fond memories of growing up, bonds with family, and the lifecycle of our only cat. I am able to hold some small hope that I can get a ginkgo bonsai one day.
Peter I was working in a Monastery in London 40 yrs ago and in the court yard was a Ginko the size of a fully grown Horse chestnut, I had never seen one before it was awesome, lucky I went to a Bonsai seller in cheshire at the same time who had two in the back of his green house quickly bought one still have it today 12" high with a 1" nebari but this year was the best i have ever seen it, a lovely tree to have in a collection👍. I bet that female Ginko quickly came of the benches😂
I love this channel! Watch every video religiously. I love the part almost 10 minutes in about how it's a short video. His information is amazing.
Also a very interesting species which is considered a "living fossil", since it's the only remnant of an ancient family dating 270 million years ago (Permian period) :0
I feel like this was just for me! Thanks Peter! Perfect start to my Sunday
I love Ginkgo trees. So beautiful. Didn't know about there being male and female trees. Now I know. Thanks.
Often you see male trees not female, the female has fruit that drops in the fall, and is messy and kinda stinks :P
@@LiveLife1DayatATimee We had females planted in our shopping centers. Needless to say, in autumn the center stank of dog droppings, and noone knew it were the fruits :P
Hi Peter I have grown very fond in the art of bonsai ever since I came across your videos six months ago, I live in Wellington New Zealand and have collected ,air layered and propergated so many plants that my wife is running out of patience with me and wants me to move next door lol , thank you for the inspiration and colorful plants and shirts hehe . My question is ,can you air layer a qinko tree ? Thanks again keep well and be safe.
The city where I live has Gingko trees planted throughout the downtown area. Also, east of where I live is the Gingko Petrified Forest State Park.
You must live in Ellensburg!
Finally.. beautiful ginkos Peter..can't wait to see the next one..cheers
Great to see a video on Ginko, Mines just leafed out a few weeks ago in Melbourne. Cheers
Thank you for such a beautiful video! My family has a ginkgo biloba in our farm in Brazil and I love that plant! My mother did only one new tree from the stick and their seeds never germinate! I always wanted to do a bonsai with it, but unfortunately I could not until now! Your ginkgos are wonderful!!! Congratulations!!!
A lovely Ginkgo Master. Thanks for sharing video. Regards 👍 😁 👌
Wow! Science class back in 1969-1970, my teacher told us there were no male gingkos, only female. I was saddened at the thought. Our schoolgrounds had several large 50-60 foot gingkos. I am so happy to know that we still have both male and female gingkos.
Actually almost all gingkos planted in public parks and the like are male, because of the smell of the fruit.
Most often reputable growers graft from known cultivars of male trees onto rootstock in order to produce trees that one can be Confident are male trees. After the Blandy Experiment, it is now known that the ratio of male to female trees grown from seed is close to 50:50. In fact, when looked at through statistics....the difference is not scientifically significant.
Unfortunately, there are still some growers that will sell you a tree grown from seed and swear it is male or female before it ha reached 15to 20 years old....the age at which ginkgoes express gender.
Naturally, those of us interested in bonsai usually could care less about ginkgo gender.
Love those Ginkgo leaves. Awesome and beautiful! Thanks Peter. Love to have a ginkgo bonsai.
Everyone: You can't tell a ginkgo’s sex until the female bears fruit.
Peter: You can tell by the slit in the leaves.
Peter is right.
Notice that there were slitted and unslitted leaves on the same tree. I haven't noticed a different ratio between male and female trees, but it might be true. What I have noticed is that the leaves that grow out on the edge of branches, from apical buds with long internodes, tend to not have the slit, while leaves that grow from the small internoded leafing points further back tend to have the slit.
A beautiful leaf of the Ginkgo. Great to be reminded of this species. thanks very much.
I love your tutorials Peter, they are always very learn full, so that you for the effort.
another interesting fact is that the where the first trees to go back green again after the Hiroshima bom.
These trees are still alive today, and there for the Ginkgo is also know as the pease trees, what a Wonderfull name for this majestic tree…
Sat in bed watching this brilliant video. Knowing I have 2 potted ginko in the garden. Can't wait to check the leaves in the spring to see if they are male or female.
The female trees also produce fruits when mature. Unfortunately, the flesh smells strongly like dog droppings so most people prefer male gingko.
I’m so glad you uploaded this video Peter. I bought a tall ginkgo (raw material) from a nursery lately and dont know what to do with it. It is a meter high and the trunk is about a finger thick.
Should I keep growing it tall or should i cut down the main trunk by half and thicken the trunk?? I live in Australia and its the end of spring here. My ginkgo has lots of green foliage now. Your specialized knowledge would be greatly appreciated... thank you in advance.
You can air layer it if you wish - Ginkgos air layer easily. But if you dont want to do that then cut it down to the height you want and make it a bonsai. It should force side shoots to grow.
Very nice story about ginko, if you could make a story or collection of your white pine, love your work
I had a friend that worked in landscaping, he gifted my with a ginko I so loved, lost it, but it, and the dawn redwood are the long livers it seems and are my favorites, which kind of surprises me because I like to style things. Thanks for this video, that female is a beauty!
Love the shirt! I bought a ginko from you recently. It's a while off being a good size for bonsai but I'm looking forward to working on it in a few years!
I think I’ve watched this video about 5 times 😳 not enough ginkgo bonsai content on UA-cam haha also Ginkgo is by far my favorite species of bonsai
The garden is very beautiful
Thank you sir for your wonderful knowledge. Beautiful Bonsai.
I think I was one of the people who wanted to see more about Ginkgo trees. Thank you for the little tour and helpful information about the Ginkgo. Very interesting. It seems to be a difficult species for Bonsai, but I'll try my best to keep mine healthy.
I have a ginko that has gone through some tough times: storm, hanging basket falling on it, top broken off, ... but it is alive and well, made many new leaves and is not in the mood yet for fall colours!
Thank you for this information. All these years, I didn't realize the male & female difference.
Great video
It is a Beautiful tree. The leaves are so unusual. 🍃🍃🍃💗💗💗
i knew that they had both a male and female tree separately but i didnt know that the female were rare, thank you for that bit of info, be strong, be safe, and be blessed
Great content as always, thanks Peter! I need to cut mine back to thicken the trunk, what time of the year should this be done?
what is the best time to take a cutting from a gingko tree to root it for making a bonsai. How long should the cutting be. I just love your you tube videos on bonsai. Cathy
Thank you peter for this video, i always enjoy watching your explanations.
Can you please say when is the best time to make cuttings ?
Soft wood cuttings are when the new shoots harden and this is in June in UK. Hardwood cuttings are done in Autumn but these are more difficult to make and need strong hormone liquid or it wont root.
Gingko is one of my favorite trees. I was very happy when i first saw one. It was in spring so it was green. There's a lot of them here in Missouri. Came Fall and they turned yellow. Soooo beautiful. The green leaf i kept was male with a slit in the middle. The one i saw in Fall is female (i only found out because of this vid). I thought it looks weird because it didn't have the slit but turned out it was rare? Awesome. ❤️❤️
My question. Will the male and female both produce seeds? Im guessing only the female does but i need confirmation. Lol. The seeds stinks so bad that i want the male tree if they don't produce seeds.
So interesting and educational. love your videos.
Have you ever worked with larches? They have beautiful colouring in autumn in the wild. Huge fan of your work!
I enjoy watching your videos, very informative and easy to follow! I love your Hawaiian shirts, reminds me so much of home...Guam. I currently live in Birmingham, Alabama.
hi peter, always love yr content. Thanks
Good shirt!!
They Amazing trees..
You forgot to mention the most beautiful fall colors of the always admired Peterus Chanis tree! Just look at it!
Lol nice outfit, sir, but no matter how much you try, you'll always be upstaged by your trees! Sorry to disappoint. Very nice video. Have you ever tried to make an eucalyptus bonsai? I have a couple of them. I enjoy their smells when I play with them.
I am running out of nice shirts. Have to keep using my old ones. Eucalyptus dont usually make nice bonsai but here in the UK, there aren't many Eucalypts that have small enough leaves, so I haven't tried them much. I guess in Australia you have a wide choice.
@@peterchan3100 I I only jest about your attire, sir. I'm from California, and we also have an abundance of eucalyptus here. True, I'm learning, they don't or I haven't seen any that are in the traditional style of bonsai. I have much to learn about the specifics of bonsai. I find my enjoyment with botany in more of a general sense and am an "old hand" at it if you will. But new to bonsai. Thank you, sir, for breathing new life into an old love, so to speak. Peace be with you.
I watched your video and this inspired me to grow my young ginko into a bonsai, the young ginko is about 27 inches tall with a quite thin trunk, not much branching yet. When can you start growing a ginko as a bonsai, what are the criteria?
Kind regards from Germany
There's a female gingko right outside my school it litters the ground with seeds every year
I am a new subscriber & not sure if I am posting in the proper place.
My question: do you have a video on when, if ever, do you remove the wire?
Thankx for this nice one! Since the females are rare... what about making cuttings to get more of them ?
Thanks l know mine is a male plant now...very informative & interesting.
Could you do a video on cedar trees?
Thanks Peter 🙏✌️👍
Kool video peter as always. Do ginkos get scarred easily by wiring? Much respect form kent.
Yes they will mark but the marks will grow out in time.
@@peterchan3100 Thank you very much peter for the reply much appreciated. Much respect from Kent.
Ginkgo very much ! Interesting.
Which kind of ginkgo is the best for bonsai?
Ginkgo chichi
Or ginkgo munchkin or Manhattan??
Hi Peter. Thanks another great video. Question: given the difficulty of getting Ginkgo to produce side branches, is there anything that can be done to encourage / increase the generation of suckers?
Growing in the open ground to get a strong tree and then chop the leading shoot to force side shoots to grow
In order to help encourage branching and keep the tree shorter, I cut current growth (once it has dropped its leaves) back to two nodes and try to pick an outward-facing bud.
For those as intrigued as I am with Ginkgo biloba, please take a look at Cor Kwant’s “The Ginkgo Pages” on the internet. It is simply amazing.
I worked with a grower in the states, hr specializes in deciduous bonsai. He shared some of the knowledge he has learned regarding ginkgo branching. He has found that keeping the soil ph between 6.5 & 7 will greatly encourage the trees to branch more readily. I have a dozen Ginkgo and it has worked well for my growing and propagation.
Good luck.
Thank you!
I'm quite sure I'm not in the possession of patience for this kind of plant :)
thank you very much for dis informative video...
Query:NO Query..
I heard somewhere there is a cut paste manufactured in Japan that is very helpful in causing pruning wounds in Ginkgo to callous over. I think it has Gibberellic acid in it. Do you know the name of the product Peter?
fwiw, if you have any ALOE plants, they work very well on tree wounds.it also keeps bugs out until the wound has sealed itself.you just rub the gel right on the cuts and walk away.
Can you air layer? And how thick?
Hello, Thank you for the video. Since I am a beginner in the bonsai world, I am wondering why the young ginko (around min 6) has it's lateral branches cut every year and not let them grow?
Good video
One of my very favorite trees👏
I bought a small Ginko and want to make cuttings into a small bonsai 😍
Can you tell me please ... Where did you get the tree ?
I love Ginkgo and bonsai however the only bonsai I have had have been 2 Ginkgo and they did not survive, I thought I just cannot keep bonsai alive but now I see it may have just been the fact that Ginkgo are not the best bonsai to keep. Guess I need to plant Ginkgo in the yard and bonsai a different kind of tree.
Is it too late to take hard cuttings to propagate? In Southern California they are yellow and leaves have not fallen yet
Thanks
Anyway i got my gingko with alluminum spine when can i took it off?
Never get disapointed by the shirts!
now this is what I call epic
Thanks for the info on identifying male/female. You'd think the female would be the split leaf kind!
Thank you for all the information. I live in Florida, US, and I would like to know what is the best plant for beginners to start
Ficus, Trident maple, Juniper are just some of the easy ones
peter chan thank you 🙏🏼
i have a ginkgo tree and it is in my kitchen.My ginkgo tree has 8 leafs but they are green for now.Why it's not growing for months ?
So if I bought seeds from the internet it's possible I would get a female tree?
There is no guarantee - you might get a female tree if you are lucky.
Nancy, I grow gingko from seed. There's a special dormancy the seeds have to achieve before they germinate in the spring. Fresh seeds or fruit you gather from the ground (where rubber gloves, fruit contains same compounds found in poison ivy oak and sumac) clean the flesh after soaking fruit for 2 day in water. Again wearing gloves you should be able to squeeze the fruit and the seed will easily slip free. I always give seeds a second rinse because nearly all botanical fruit contains growth inhibitors to prevent the seed from germinating in the fruit. So I give a second rinse then lay the seeds to dry. Once your seeds are dry your seeds need about 8 weeks of warmth where the seed continues to develop. After the 8 weeks of warmth you need to give them the remaining time until spring in the fridge in a ziploc bag. Then in spring once the ground has thawed sow them in the ground. If you live in a city that has an arborist you can call them and find out where there are female gingkos. Because of the special dormancy requirements of the seeds gingko rarely escapes cultivation. Best wishes and happy growing!
Thank you
@@nancyfahey7518 I just collected some Ginkgo seeds in my nearby park in last years autumn, cleaned them thoroughly, then put them in the fridge until early spring, then put them in some pots. I didn't use any special soil or anything, so I'd say it's not really that complicated actually. I think at least 3/4 of the seeds grew into small plants this year. Good luck!
How can tell me, can I use gingko as a indoor bonsai?
our gingkos dropped every single leaf over the course of one night - all still green. green carpet on the ground slowly turned yellow...
when is the best time to take gingko cuttings? we have three trees (may be clones of each other) that I can take cuttings from -
Semi hard cuttings taken in June/July
Hi can it grow in very hot climate like tropical one?
hmm is it possible to graft male branches on a female tree for it to fertilise the seeds by itself?
In front of primary school that I have attended, there is still a female gynko. Yes it is stunning, high and almost golden in autumn. But I remember the smell of gynko nuts. Oh my.
When can Ginkgo cuttings be taken?
Loved the video, however gingko trees are one of those plants that have non uniform leaves, and can have different shaped leaves throughout the tree, similar to mulberry and sassfras. So you cannot reliably sex a gingko tree by leaf only. The best way is to see in spring. Males produce pollen, females produce these pistil shaped nubs that are the female flowers. Females also produce a pretty but stinky fruit. There are instances where a tree might develop a different sexed branch, such as an a male tree having a single branch with fruit, but its very rare.
slightly disappointed :( but now I understand some of the challenges of growing ginkgo. one step at a time I suppose. going to make my first attempt at germinating seeds in the spring.
It's really easy to germinate them inside, just put in a bag some nuts with some moist sand and throw them in the fridge. After a month or two you will notice they all start to germinate, really easy to germinate. I noticed those I keep on my balcony and water every two days grow really fast, the ones planted outside in southern Romania grow veeeery slow, I assume because of the dry climate and watering only once a week instead of every two days.
Very helpful! Thank you ;)
regarding air layering gingkos ? possible when dormant or after leaves have established ? thanks
Apply air layers in spring after the first flush hardens off. Use a strong rooting hormone on these layers to get them to callous and push roots. I’ve had it take 2 seasons for roots to form, so be patient. They root easily just slowly. Good luck.
can the size and length of the leaves be reduced by defoliation?
I just bought one yesterday :D
So you plant 100 gingko seeds and you get how many females asked the old owl?
Another super video - thank you! Any idea why the female ginkgo is so very rare?
I have no idea - Nature is strange!
Blue Sky Bonsai
Most people don’t want the females in their yard because their fruit makes a mess and smells very bad😉
Do you grow Ginko in normal bonsai soil?
Yes you can but I find they prefer a loamy soil
Simply gorgeous
I respect Peter Chan greatly for his knowledge, experience and expertise but I believe he is propagating a myth when he says you can determine Ginkgo biloba gender by the absence of a cleft in the leaves. Many times I have harvested ginkgo fruit from trees whose leaves contained a center cleft as well as trees whose leaves contained no cleft at all.
There are many thoughts on how to best determine ginkgo gender based on plant morphology but, to the best of my knowledge after decades of exhausting research of the literature and first hand observation, the only way I can be sure of gender is by the presence of female flowers or male flowers on the tree. As you may know these flowers do not appear until the tree is 15 years old or older.
It is my understanding from the literature that there is an electrophoresis test that can determine gender from leaf material at any age of the plant but it is too expensive to run on a routine basis...so far.
My experience of this aspect ie Gender - is based on what Japanese growers have told me. As I have never had my Ginkgos produce seed I cannot vouch for it. Besides - on some Ginkgo plants - they have both types of leaves (with slit and without), so what does that tell you? DNA and other tests are not within the reach of poor farmers and growers - but thanks for drawing attention to this topic.
peter chan ...very true. I hope that researchers will one day make an affordable kit that will allow those interested to determine their ginkgoes’ gender earlier than 15 years.
Thank you for your rapid reply and thank you for your interesting and informative videos. I am constantly recommending them to my bonsai-loving colleagues.
@@jeffdodson1675 -- Its nice to learn something new all the time and its folk like you who help to add to my knowledge.
Can Gingko living in tropic or sub tropic?
Have you tried smoking the female leaves. It's all academic but I would
Look at those junipers behind him!
If I grow from cutting of ginkgo, the sex of the tree won’t change, is it right?
Very beautiful
Can you comment on California white oak
What is the botanical name please?
Ginko sex ratio is 1:1 and although they tend to be separate in sex, branches on trees have been known to spontaneously change to the opposite sex 😊. Fascinating tree
I like how mine suckers...lots of possibilities....and more trees easily
Interesting about leaf shape. Here in the US, I've always heard that the only way to tell a female was if it produced seeds, & they are rare because the seeds are so stinky. So people avoid planting them. Supposedly, the males are cloned & this is a problem for genetic diversity. I know where several local female trees are, & collected seeds & leaves this year. As you say, they are rounded.
Exatly. And I couldn't find anything about it on the internet. In fact both male and female trees appear to have leaf variation: with and without the slit. Female trees are rarer to find because obviously there's not much demand for female trees due to the smell of the fruit, but I actually live near a park that has a female tree (and it indeed smeells like putrid meat when the fruits are on the ground)
Does anyone know if ginkgo can be air layered quickly and easily?
I successfully air layered a branch. It took two years.
@Sunweaver593 thanks, any tips specific to ginkgo that you can make?
Not really. I’m just starting out with ginkgoes. The one I air layered is a branch from a Princeton sentinel which was hanging over the sidewalk so it had to be removed anyway. This variety throws out a lot of branches so I am hoping it will make a good bonsai,