Not the most imaginative name to give it but it’s what I’ve called it for years. I spotted it on the bench this afternoon with the sun just hitting the foliage. Camera in hand I popped out for a few snaps.





Not the most imaginative name to give it but it’s what I’ve called it for years. I spotted it on the bench this afternoon with the sun just hitting the foliage. Camera in hand I popped out for a few snaps.





Well my little Potentilla purchased from Willowbog in February has produced it’s first of many flowers.

Here’s a few links to other posts about this tree. I should really start to put these together in the my bonsai section.
https://bonsaieejit.wordpress.com/2011/02/28/issy/
https://bonsaieejit.wordpress.com/2011/03/02/little-issy-repotted/
I took a few update photos of my escallonia yesterday. They seem to becoming quite popular with all the collected ones being shown on the forums of late. I have two more ready for collection next Spring and I have a secret one that’s rather special up my sleeve too 😉
I repotted this one back in November. This would bother some people, but I have found that all the trees I repotted early this year have done really well even after the horrible Winter we just experienced. It all comes down to after care and protection, and this is were a poly tunnel comes in handy.



Another one trimmed back today was my Hawthorn raft. It had put out quite a few extension shoots that needed curtailed before they thicken. I also had to rub off numerous adventurous buds popping in all the wrong places.



I lifted a few of my maples out of the greenhouse today for a closer look and to check a few bits of wire added during the Winter. Some had long shoots that were removed. This first one is the sick one I bought last year in order to save it. The roots were in shocking order and the trunk base rotting. Base now preserved and I think it’s putting out strong root now it’s in a nice free draining mix. It’s certainly putting out leaves!
Next up is the Chuhin Maple that everyone seems to love, me included. It has also responded really well to a better mix.
and lastly is my Stratford Trident Maple. I have decided to lift it out of the greenhouse now that the leaves have hardened off. I usually de-foliate this one 2-3 times in the year. As it was repotted, I’ll hold back this year and maybe go for 1-2 times.

Spent a few hours in the sun this afternoon tidying up around the garden and cutting grass. I decided enough was enough and got the camera and scissors out and trimmed back some very strong Spring foliage on my trees.
To keep this diary up to date I’ll split up the days work into a few posts. First up are a few accents. The first one is a weed, but a pretty weed.
Next up is one of my attempts at kusamono. It’s made up of hosta, dwarf aquilegia, dwarf Iris and a bit of mud rock. Most of the stuff is still emerging but the aquilegia is ahead of the game.

...
This is a tray of potted hostas that my mate Stephen gave me. About half of them are well on their way. The other half are just starting to poke their noses out. Three different varieties.

Bonsai that is 🙂
My big Rhododendron has started to drop some of it’s flowers and to make sure I get all the seed pods off, I removed the rest by hand today. If you do it at this stage, it’s easy to spot the little red tips and the emerging shoots below are easy to avoid. If you leave it until all the flowers drop of their own accord, seed heads are hard to spot, you tend to knock off new shoots and it stresses the tree even further.
Here’s it before.
These are what I’m removing. Some have already dropped the flower petals leaving the seed heads.
and this is it 45 minutes later.
this is under the bench!
I have given the tree it’s first feed and a good watering in.
…a month makes.
This is a quick snap from the door of my greenhouse on 15th March
and another one taken today.

This litle Cork Bark Elm has responded really well to a repot. This it a week or so ago.
It had fully opened since then but I wasn’t happy with the length of some of the internal branches. I want to build up a fine ramification and some of these are too long and straggly. I decided I needed to take it back in quite hard to eliminate the strait bits and force some back budding. This is it today.


Every year my Common Juniper gets it’s usual flowering of rust fungus. It usually occures in February. Last year it got a major dose of fungicide and I had crossed my fingers for this year.
This was it yesterday. 😦 It’s just starting and hasn’t got to that jelly like state yet. I have kept it in the tunnel and on the dry side. It usually goes nuts after a heavy shower.

The general health of the tree is very good. It was repotted in the Autumn and spent the Winter in the poly tunnel. The problem with the rust is that it seems to cause the tree to throw the odd branch. Here’s an example.
Guess I’ll keep trying different fungicides and keep my fingers crossed.
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