This video fill the gap!!! Yeah! Thats it! The fundamental piece of knowledge I needed to understand the never bare root and leaving some portion untouched!!!! Yeah! Great! Enjoying it from Spain!!!!
I'm enjoying every educational minute as if it was a blockbuster movie. Looking forward to the next session. Your passion is contagious, Ryan. Thank you for making Bonsai great.
Thank you Ryan I have learned so much from you in the last 6 months it means the world to me, just got in to bonsai the last year or so im from the uk,keep up the great work I wish you and your team all the success in the world maybe one day I'll have the privilege of meeting you.😀 😊
WOW!! to see the story of 10years unraveling before my eyes was a real treat thankyou, the process is beautiful. Tree, Lichen and pot are phenomenal. もっとランボ見たい!😂
Hi Ryan,thank you very much for sharing this beautiful and very interesting video! I really appreciated your way of explaining while you are doing a job,you are unique and have a great talent,your valuable advice is a great stimulus for me and a great source of inspiration. Very compliments!👍👍👍👍🔥
A trick I have learned and kind of honed over about 15 years ballpark for the transferring of original soil in yamadori is that the first 2 years I leave it alone. I don't mess with it and the tree sits atop the same bonsai soil it will have later on. Starting the third year I will " core" the soil near the trunk. I take a piece of copper pipe, be it 1/2" or whatever appropriate size and I sharpen one edge. I beat that pipe down into the soil in random intervals taking plugs of root and original soil. I've found you don't really want to go past about 10%. Then your left with a tube shaped hole. Fill that hole with semi packed bonsai soil and water in. Avoid the same areas each year you do it trying to get fresh spots and from what I've experienced the bonsai soil becomes inoculated with the good stuff in the soil and the roots grow into it really fine. It is a slow process but I've had good success from it and the only time I've ever had a tree show signs of stress after is when I did too much so I'd stay at about a 10% change year over year. The trees I started with are all still thriving and in 100% bonsai soil now, some still in the original pots which I'm able to do because in both root trimming and refreshing the soil gradually.
Thanks for bringing this Bonsai Tree back , Have you Thought of doing a Updates on Last year or a few years ago repot Bonsai Trees? Maybe live walk through the Mirai Great Garden?
okay, I'm going to see what level of patreon I can afford. Meanwhile, I'm going to be looking for a pine to add to my "outdoor" collection. I hope some questions will be answered looking into the archives. I live in South Jersey in the Pinelands (Pineys). Lots of wilderness but the Pineland pine is protected. They have finally realized that the Pineland was created in fire. Unless their pine cones are touched by fire, they don't pop open to release their seeds. I can't believe that in the 70s this developer wanted to create an airport twice the size of Newark airport, smack in the middle of the Pinelands. I'm so thankful for the foresighted individuals who came together and fought it. Once a year they offer different Pineland unique plants and trees and bushes to add to our landscaping. I'll be seeing if they are offering them this year, though summer was near-drought conditions. A Pineland pine would be perfect for a literati style tree. If they don't have their annual sale this year, I'll be able to petition the committee to yamadori a small tree. I do believe the permission granted would last a year. Anyway, if this doesn't work out, I can look at different nurseries to find a specimen worthy of bonsai (and usually,m nothing else). I'd like to go for under $50, but with the prices lately I'll have to up tha to $75. As this is my first pine, what should I be looking for?
Thank you for such a detailed stream/video! Just the method of chop sticking was an eye opener for me. I've been doing it wrong. A short video on the face and reference point would be helpful, and maybe a good place to purchase. I'm getting ready to repot an old Japanese White pine with craggy bark, and was looking for a video on how to protect the bark while repotting. I'm still looking for a good method to protect the bark on a 2 ft tree. Thank you again Ryan
NOTE TO SELF: start taking photos of my mature tree [an annual photo, before/after root work as well as before and after removal from pot, et al], This is what I would have liked to see in this live stream. I'd have liked to seen it to compare and recognize what I'm seeing. Also, concerning a major company's premixed substrates include 1/8 to 1/16 inch composted pine pieces. It actually drives me nuts because it floats. For my tropicals, in winter I dunk the smaller trees (pots). It that amendment undesirable. I guess I'll use these blends for young trees. I'll go back to mixing my own substrate. Tiny Roots has good reviews and I was hoping to save some time. but even their inorganic mix has these particles. as far as I know, bark is an organic. Oh well, live and learn.
Very educational and inspiring. May I ask, by the look of the rootball, there is a lot of organic matter, and not having added organic material in the new soil, do you apply the fertilizer cakes or granules directly in the soil and let it decompose? Thank you
Hi please can you tell me the name of that tool you used to remove your bonsai out of its pot … comer or something not sure? I couldn’t find it anywhere..
Are you saying manipulating this tree keeps the needles short? I can walk across the street and dig up a Ponderosa sapling, but the needles are already long.
All that youre using is a mix of akadama, pumice and lava rock? About equal parts? And why isnt the rootball completly cleaned so u can put fresh soilmix under there? Why is it better to keep the organic soil around the rootball? Thanks anyone
Im wondering if anyone has used the Willamette Valley variety of ponderosa? Unlike other ponderosas they’re tolerant of water, the Willamette Valley is pretty wet.
So I keep finding conflicting information on when you’re able to remove branches and wire pines. Some say do it mis summer, others when the tree is dormant. Can anyone clarify when these things can be done for dwarf mugo pines?
The thing is that you can do both, I had success with summer wire because somehow stimulated a lot of backbuds where I did the biggest bends. I also had success with winter one so I’d say that if the tree is vigorous you can do both
@@CharlieForeign so i have 4. i worked during summer with scots pine 2 years ago and they backbudded the opened the buds last year( first spring after the summer work) , while usally i work during winter with scot pine japanese black pine and italian black pine or villetta barrea and didnt really had problems. i only work when they vigorius and not every other year
Soy un aferrimo seguidor, pero no hablo inglés. Podrá poner en próximos documentales subtitulo al español? Sería para mi fantástico. Gracias de todos modos. Saludos para ti y todo el equipo
(I’m Italian I’ll tell you what we have here maybe help) we have double band akadama 22€ for 14 L triple band 30€ for 14L triple band is harder and has less dust. In the end we have this fired clay that looks like pink/red akadama which is 10€ for 14L looks like broken pots but works fine for me
@@mirkonicosiavinci8972 l’ho presa da ibuki bonsai su internet lo scorso anno ma ne ho ancora… sembrano vasi di coccio rotti e setacciati 🤷🏻♂️ Si chiama semi fired akadama e un sacco 14l veniva 10€ + spedizione
@@mirkonicosiavinci8972 io avevo diviso con altri diversi sacchi alla fine mi era venuto 13,5e a sacco contando la spedizione quest'anno costa 26 un sacco? comuque ho coltivato querce da seme, 3 talee di itoigawa e un fico(ficus carica) tutte con 60pomice e 40 quella akadama cotta tutto 3-5mm e niente le piante stanno bene sono vigorose, non ho problemi, considera che sto a roma qui nongela nemmeno quindi anche akadama normale non si disgrega come dicono molte persone
In my opinion, the pot is too small and should extend more to the left to give visual stability to the tree. A slightly shallower oval pot with the tree planted off center would look better.
If you had DG mixed in that bonsai soil it would be much easier to report i was running 50 50 organic soil to golden CA DG I could almost just shack the plant after 4 years and soil fall away from perfect root structure shaped like pot. You can run almost pure DG 15% soil to DG they grow good like natural hydro.
I make my own documents from RUclips videos by opening the transcript (3 dots under the video) drag/copy and paste into a Word document. Then edit to your liking. I have a whole library 🙂.
I don’t get the comment 😂 free informations for a demo that you could pay 100 bucks to see it live by someone that couldn’t even explain half of what he did and you complain about his voice?
the probably best repotting video you will find. teaching the things you are never teached.
This video fill the gap!!! Yeah! Thats it! The fundamental piece of knowledge I needed to understand the never bare root and leaving some portion untouched!!!! Yeah! Great! Enjoying it from Spain!!!!
I'm enjoying every educational minute as if it was a blockbuster movie. Looking forward to the next session. Your passion is contagious, Ryan. Thank you for making Bonsai great.
Thank you Ryan I have learned so much from you in the last 6 months it means the world to me, just got in to bonsai the last year or so im from the uk,keep up the great work I wish you and your team all the success in the world maybe one day I'll have the privilege of meeting you.😀 😊
You’re the best teacher. Excellent demonstration. Thank you. ❤
WOW!! to see the story of 10years unraveling before my eyes was a real treat thankyou, the process is beautiful. Tree, Lichen and pot are phenomenal. もっとランボ見たい!😂
Excellent video! I never thought I would watch 2.5 hours of a tree repotting, but I did, I loved it, and I learned a ton! Thank you
This has been the most informative video I’ve seen! Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
thank you! this has been so useful! you've answered so many questions i've had over the past couple years.
You're a good teacher. Thank you.
Outstanding amount of learning in this Mirai video, a Big Thankyou for making this available... You are the Man.
Thank you very very very much
greetings from a long time viewer from chile
That's one sick tree, Rambo!
It's amazing, wish everyone who sees this comment good health and happiness
It amazes me that that is ten years of growth i would expect more.
Thank you for your great work, Ryan and all Mirai!
You are a great professor!
I learned so much from this session! Thank you!
Amazing as always from Mirai - thank you!
THIS is the info I needed! Thanks!
Thank you Ryan, what a lovely job! I must admit that I was expecting more mycorrhizae on the edge of the root ball! Thank you again!🙏😊
Hi Ryan,thank you very much for sharing this beautiful and very interesting video! I really appreciated your way of explaining while you are doing a job,you are unique and have a great talent,your valuable advice is a great stimulus for me and a great source of inspiration. Very compliments!👍👍👍👍🔥
Thanks Ryan. Superb.... as always 👍
Great instructions and education!
A trick I have learned and kind of honed over about 15 years ballpark for the transferring of original soil in yamadori is that the first 2 years I leave it alone. I don't mess with it and the tree sits atop the same bonsai soil it will have later on. Starting the third year I will " core" the soil near the trunk. I take a piece of copper pipe, be it 1/2" or whatever appropriate size and I sharpen one edge. I beat that pipe down into the soil in random intervals taking plugs of root and original soil. I've found you don't really want to go past about 10%. Then your left with a tube shaped hole. Fill that hole with semi packed bonsai soil and water in. Avoid the same areas each year you do it trying to get fresh spots and from what I've experienced the bonsai soil becomes inoculated with the good stuff in the soil and the roots grow into it really fine. It is a slow process but I've had good success from it and the only time I've ever had a tree show signs of stress after is when I did too much so I'd stay at about a 10% change year over year. The trees I started with are all still thriving and in 100% bonsai soil now, some still in the original pots which I'm able to do because in both root trimming and refreshing the soil gradually.
I’m sorry to say but I’ve stoped watching every other bonsai Chanel’s this the one n only n another guy from Spain I enjoy he teaches like this
Thank you for the free lesson.
Thanks for bringing this Bonsai Tree back , Have you Thought of doing a Updates on Last year or a few years ago repot Bonsai Trees? Maybe live walk through the Mirai Great Garden?
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder
Luar biasa bagus bonsai cemaranya
okay, I'm going to see what level of patreon I can afford. Meanwhile, I'm going to be looking for a pine to add to my "outdoor" collection. I hope some questions will be answered looking into the archives. I live in South Jersey in the Pinelands (Pineys). Lots of wilderness but the Pineland pine is protected.
They have finally realized that the Pineland was created in fire. Unless their pine cones are touched by fire, they don't pop open to release their seeds. I can't believe that in the 70s this developer wanted to create an airport twice the size of Newark airport, smack in the middle of the Pinelands. I'm so thankful for the foresighted individuals who came together and fought it. Once a year they offer different Pineland unique plants and trees and bushes to add to our landscaping. I'll be seeing if they are offering them this year, though summer was near-drought conditions. A Pineland pine would be perfect for a literati style tree.
If they don't have their annual sale this year, I'll be able to petition the committee to yamadori a small tree. I do believe the permission granted would last a year. Anyway, if this doesn't work out, I can look at different nurseries to find a specimen worthy of bonsai (and usually,m nothing else). I'd like to go for under $50, but with the prices lately I'll have to up tha to $75. As this is my first pine, what should I be looking for?
Just gave the 1000th like! Excellent stuff.
Thank you for such a detailed stream/video!
Just the method of chop sticking was an eye opener for me. I've been doing it wrong.
A short video on the face and reference point would be helpful, and maybe a good place to purchase.
I'm getting ready to repot an old Japanese White pine with craggy bark, and was looking for a video on how to
protect the bark while repotting. I'm still looking for a good method to protect the bark on a 2 ft tree.
Thank you again Ryan
Thanks guys great video.
I like this video and tree your wark is very fine
Thank you for teaching 😊
Hướng dẫn bổ ích, cảm ơn bạn rất nhiều!
Bagus sekali karakternya
NOTE TO SELF: start taking photos of my mature tree [an annual photo, before/after root work as well as before and after removal from pot, et al], This is what I would have liked to see in this live stream. I'd have liked to seen it to compare and recognize what I'm seeing.
Also, concerning a major company's premixed substrates include 1/8 to 1/16 inch composted pine pieces. It actually drives me nuts because it floats. For my tropicals, in winter I dunk the smaller trees (pots). It that amendment undesirable. I guess I'll use these blends for young trees. I'll go back to mixing my own substrate. Tiny Roots has good reviews and I was hoping to save some time. but even their inorganic mix has these particles. as far as I know, bark is an organic. Oh well, live and learn.
😊😊
That OCD tool layout at the start though.
😂
Very educational and inspiring.
May I ask, by the look of the rootball, there is a lot of organic matter, and not having added organic material in the new soil, do you apply the fertilizer cakes or granules directly in the soil and let it decompose?
Thank you
Lichen is also a producer of nitrates, it isn’t just pretty. That, and the moss splitting grow media creates a very contained ecosystem with the tree.
Namaste master 🙏🌳🌲🎄🌴💐🍁🥰🇳🇵🙏🙏🙏
I’ve a question. After you completed repotting how often to watering the bonsai
do you ever use water to wash the roots? or a gentle jet stream for removing the field soil?
Hi please can you tell me the name of that tool you used to remove your bonsai out of its pot … comer or something not sure? I couldn’t find it anywhere..
somehow this hole in the underside of the rootball looks super unsettling
Can you compare Calcined clay to Akadama clay?
Are you saying manipulating this tree keeps the needles short? I can walk across the street and dig up a Ponderosa sapling, but the needles are already long.
All that youre using is a mix of akadama, pumice and lava rock? About equal parts? And why isnt the rootball completly cleaned so u can put fresh soilmix under there? Why is it better to keep the organic soil around the rootball? Thanks anyone
Im wondering if anyone has used the Willamette Valley variety of ponderosa? Unlike other ponderosas they’re tolerant of water, the Willamette Valley is pretty wet.
You can sharpen a serrated edge, although you might not want to.
Ima simple man, I saw a 2+ hour Mirai Video, I click
Wait, how many years did it go untouched? This was three years ago? I don't have that discipline . . . yet.
That's why it's recommended to have many trees! I've killed several by impatience and enthusiasm...
Is he using stainless steel safety wire to wire that tree to the pot?
So I keep finding conflicting information on when you’re able to remove branches and wire pines. Some say do it mis summer, others when the tree is dormant. Can anyone clarify when these things can be done for dwarf mugo pines?
The thing is that you can do both, I had success with summer wire because somehow stimulated a lot of backbuds where I did the biggest bends. I also had success with winter one so I’d say that if the tree is vigorous you can do both
@@alessandromassimo5717 what pines did you work on? Thanks for the info!
@@CharlieForeign so i have 4. i worked during summer with scots pine 2 years ago and they backbudded the opened the buds last year( first spring after the summer work) , while usally i work during winter with scot pine japanese black pine and italian black pine or villetta barrea and didnt really had problems. i only work when they vigorius and not every other year
Soy un aferrimo seguidor, pero no hablo inglés. Podrá poner en próximos documentales subtitulo al español? Sería para mi fantástico.
Gracias de todos modos.
Saludos para ti y todo el equipo
Ci sono già i sottotitoli. Devi cliccare traduzione automatica e scegliere la tua lingua
Why are we repotting in February?
Why don,t you hit the root ball with a rubber mallet around ad around to get the dirt to loosen so it’s easier to rake the eart out,.
hola ,hay algun motibo espscial para no poner subtitulos ,gracias un saludo
Did you say it was 2019?
Are they talking to childre??
What is the ‘best akadama” and where can we source it in USA?”
(I’m Italian I’ll tell you what we have here maybe help) we have double band akadama 22€ for 14 L
triple band 30€ for 14L triple band is harder and has less dust. In the end we have this fired clay that looks like pink/red akadama which is 10€ for 14L looks like broken pots but works fine for me
@@alessandromassimo5717 dove prendi akadama cotta a 10€ 14lt?
@@mirkonicosiavinci8972 l’ho presa da ibuki bonsai su internet lo scorso anno ma ne ho ancora… sembrano vasi di coccio rotti e setacciati 🤷🏻♂️
Si chiama semi fired akadama e un sacco 14l veniva 10€ + spedizione
@@alessandromassimo5717 si mi sono arrivati anche a me i cocci a 26€ speriamo che facciano il loro lavoro.. come ti trovi?
@@mirkonicosiavinci8972 io avevo diviso con altri diversi sacchi alla fine mi era venuto 13,5e a sacco contando la spedizione quest'anno costa 26 un sacco?
comuque ho coltivato querce da seme, 3 talee di itoigawa e un fico(ficus carica) tutte con 60pomice e 40 quella akadama cotta tutto 3-5mm e niente le piante stanno bene sono vigorose, non ho problemi, considera che sto a roma qui nongela nemmeno quindi anche akadama normale non si disgrega come dicono molte persone
The lady's voice sounds like the lady's voice from good muthical morning.
In my opinion, the pot is too small and should extend more to the left to give visual stability to the tree. A slightly shallower oval pot with the tree planted off center would look better.
Tuyệt đẹp ❤ !
"Don't push me!"
If you had DG mixed in that bonsai soil it would be much easier to report i was running 50 50 organic soil to golden CA DG I could almost just shack the plant after 4 years and soil fall away from perfect root structure shaped like pot. You can run almost pure DG 15% soil to DG they grow good like natural hydro.
The only thing I would change in my mix is to add 10% peralite.
In Thailand and Indonesia, they don't pull the plant. Instead, they crack and smashed the pot.
Can someone explain what is meant by "sheen/shin" Is it a Japanese word? I missed it if it was explained in the video. Thanks.
The sheen is the central portion of the root-ball right underneath the trunk. Don’t know where the word stems from.
@@chris1979284 Thank you.
@@chris1979284 Also, is an Anderson flat the wooden grow box built for a collected tree?
Use gleaning vinegar 10% acidity. Wipe let sit over and over or soak pot in cleaning vinegar 5%will work just slower
The pot is little too small for tree
somebody ever triede to feed the trees with shilajit?
Insupportable !
This guy is smart and knows what he is talking about but the way he talks is kind of hilarious.
Why?
Again, please find someone to help document your work in written form. This Mirai knowledge could become reference material
I make my own documents from RUclips videos by opening the transcript (3 dots under the video) drag/copy and paste into a Word document. Then edit to your liking. I have a whole library 🙂.
That just looks exhausting, I would have just took a reciprocating saw to it first
And you would kill it.....
👍
That pot looks too small for that tree imho…..
Leider verstehe ich nichts😩😩😩
I think that tree would look better to cut back that lower gin in half because it to long and straight
instead of spending all that time chop-sticking why just vibrate the pot. Probably do a way better job also to fill all the voids.
No it won't, the soil needs to move in all directions, including up.....
Primo
bones eye mind
😅😅😮😮
Only "guys" can watch his videos
too much talking. makes the video unwatchable
2019??? WTH❗
way too long
He really does enjoy the sound of his own voice don't he? I don't see how you get the tree to fit in the room around his ego.
I don’t get the comment 😂 free informations for a demo that you could pay 100 bucks to see it live by someone that couldn’t even explain half of what he did and you complain about his voice?
😂
Uh he's trying to teach us. Duh.
Spoken like a true person that can't learn.... Anything.
誰でも出来る
Talk to much
It's all valuable information you need, if you're going to grow world quality bonsai.
Ty mate!
这是典型的中国花盆,样式名称为“海棠盆”。对于盆栽花盆,日本几乎没有原创的样式。所以由此可见,日本将盆栽艺术发扬光大了这没有错,但盆栽毕竟起源于中国,这门艺术的根在中国。