Wow that was very informative thank you. You have a nice birch there and that filled me in with my newly acquired one and I was afraid to cut back the roots but now that it is the right time of year the collected birch will be having a root trim. I also was hoping to find something on flowering almond from nursery stock, thats what made me stay at your video and I'm glad to see you there from Bonsai Empire.
Wow, this is the best explanation and display I have seen so far. Thank you for the video. Question, if I may. I have very new Japanese maples that I want to make into Bonsai. Would you recommend putting one or two of them in the ground for a year or two to fatten up? Thank you so much for the video. PS: I am in Melbourne, Australia and we experience all four seasons. The Melbourne climate is temperate. Our summers are hot and dry and our winters are cold. The season months are : Spring: September to November, Summer: December to February Autumn: March to May Winter: June to August
great video! what fertiliser do you recommend using when using a completely inorganic potting medium? i currently use a medium with about 70-80% inorganic and 20-30 organic materials. Thanks!
+benrobertson4730 There are so many different opinions regarding soil composition that there are thousands of forums open on this subject as well as arguments. If you found something that works and it's cheap for you, keep on using it ;) I use almost all inorganic, because I found something that is cheap in my area and works great. For fertilizer, I think it's good to mix with organic pellets, liquid, sometimes inorganic just keep mixing it up. Remember lots of N = lots of growth. Good luck
+tomiduplex thanks for the reply! i've found my mix works really well and is very affordable on my student budget. i've been using pellets and a liquid fertiliser but not too frequently, do you add liquid fertiliser when watering most days with an inorganic mix?
Hands down the most condensed, good information, of all the bonsai videos I've seen.
If you have the opportunity to take any of his classes, do it.
you are so kind looking and also very generous to show the details. Many thanks.
Wow that was very informative thank you. You have a nice birch there and that filled me in with my newly acquired one and I was afraid to cut back the roots but now that it is the right time of year the collected birch will be having a root trim. I also was hoping to find something on flowering almond from nursery stock, thats what made me stay at your video and I'm glad to see you there from Bonsai Empire.
Great! A very helpful video.
Thanks and regards.
i have all his training dvds. they are really helpful for beginners like me. :)
+eugenio desantiago Cool, they're good aren't they?! Did you try our beginners course as well, with Bjorn Bjorholm, by any chance?
Rookies and medium lvl
Bjorn at empire
Mauro’s book is helpful
Thank you so much for this.... Beautifully explained!
Thank you for the info, im starting my bonsai journey
Great job
Excellent video. thnx a lot.
nice video
Hi...
Did you ever try make a Bonsai from Mango tree?
Greetings from Island of God, Bali
Wow, this is the best explanation and display I have seen so far. Thank you for the video. Question, if I may.
I have very new Japanese maples that I want to make into Bonsai. Would you recommend putting one or two of them in the ground for a year or two to fatten up? Thank you so much for the video. PS: I am in Melbourne, Australia and we experience all four seasons. The Melbourne climate is temperate. Our summers are hot and dry and our winters are cold.
The season months are :
Spring: September to November,
Summer: December to February
Autumn: March to May
Winter: June to August
Perhaps try our forum for your question, we'll help you there.
Bought My First Bonsai Seeds , Cant wait to make em grow grow grow , Thanks for video I subscribed
Where do you get your tools from?
great video! what fertiliser do you recommend using when using a completely inorganic potting medium? i currently use a medium with about 70-80% inorganic and 20-30 organic materials. Thanks!
+benrobertson4730 There are so many different opinions regarding soil composition that there are thousands of forums open on this subject as well as arguments. If you found something that works and it's cheap for you, keep on using it ;) I use almost all inorganic, because I found something that is cheap in my area and works great. For fertilizer, I think it's good to mix with organic pellets, liquid, sometimes inorganic just keep mixing it up. Remember lots of N = lots of growth. Good luck
+tomiduplex thanks for the reply! i've found my mix works really well and is very affordable on my student budget. i've been using pellets and a liquid fertiliser but not too frequently, do you add liquid fertiliser when watering most days with an inorganic mix?
"so, don't be lazy!" . . . is he spying on me?
best ..........