Stimulating Backbudding on Taxus (Yew) Bonsai

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  • Опубликовано: 31 янв 2025
  • When developing bonsai it is important to stimulate backbudding. Fortunately, with taxus this is very easy to do. I show how to get backbudding on a yew bonsai so that you can do it too.

Комментарии • 56

  • @XaviersBonsaiRetreat
    @XaviersBonsaiRetreat 2 года назад +6

    Spot on Jelle - you always give the information we need in an easy to understand way. I have some smaller Yews and I find that I do my shoot and branch pruning in early summer (as you mentioned) and then needle plucking around mid-August. It was something that Tony Tickle recommends in his tutorials and I like being able to space out sections of work. They are another good tree to work on.

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад +1

      Hi Xavier, Funny that you mention Tony. I have spent a few weekend with him a looong time ago, in which we indeed discussed Yew maintenance. Earlier needle plucking can help in backbuds opening the same year, however, not all years my yews are ready at that time yet. I guess it all comes down to listening to what the tree needs when!

    • @XaviersBonsaiRetreat
      @XaviersBonsaiRetreat 2 года назад

      @@GrowingBonsai you are spot on and as you have spoken to him directly you will have the best interpretation. It is great learning variations rather than misunderstanding a 'one size fits all' approach. Thank you for your insight on this. I am definitely not an expert😁

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад +1

      @@XaviersBonsaiRetreat We are all beginners in different stages of the process, and all the time we need to keep looking around asking for advice from all of us learners to get the optimal results!
      I can certainly recommend chatting with @TonyTickle re. Yews. Possibly the european expert on the species

  • @BlueJayBonsai
    @BlueJayBonsai 2 года назад +2

    I don’t have any Yews, but you’ve inspired me to look for a Taxus cuspidata/Japanese yew. Thanks Jelle! 🐦💙

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад +1

      You should! Let me know when you find one! Maybe we can do a collaboration, with me sketching a design??

  • @royhicks3957
    @royhicks3957 8 месяцев назад +1

    many thanks for this very easy to understand video on how to prune taxus, no complicated jargon, excellent!!

  • @natrjack965
    @natrjack965 2 года назад +1

    Great video Jelle another masterclass from the master 👏...

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад

      You are too kind! I have some idea about common mistakes in bonsai, but Master, that is really overly kind! I think I need a few decades of learning!

    • @natrjack965
      @natrjack965 2 года назад

      @@GrowingBonsai your videos have taught me a lot and I am truly grateful that you share your knowledge and experience with many beginners like my self ..a massive THANKS YELLE 😊

  • @jeffhurst4744
    @jeffhurst4744 2 года назад +1

    Another good video. Nice you included removal of old needles and how it helps back-budding. Now I will do it to the extent you discussed. Only removed some before.

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад

      hey, glad it was new to you. It makes a massive difference!

  • @bradleyc9538
    @bradleyc9538 2 года назад

    Nice video, Jelle. Thank you. I love working with Taxus - they have so many great characteristics to offer.

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад

      I totally agree! It is maybe my favorite species, and certainly in my top5!

  • @bartstellink307
    @bartstellink307 Год назад

    Love your videos man, so much good info. Thanks! Just got into taxus and really love them. On 1 of them I did a trunkchop (my first) and it popped out a huge amount of buds on old wood.

  • @thenaturecreater8906
    @thenaturecreater8906 2 года назад +1

    Wow what beauty of a taxus!

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад +1

      Thank you! Origin: Garden hedgerow!

  • @MehranAshkanian
    @MehranAshkanian 29 дней назад +1

    Hi Jelle. Marry Christmas and a very happy new year.
    I intend to make a Taxus Bacatta Forest Bonsai i have 9 of them in seperate black nursery pots. I bought them last Fall late Summer
    They are about 1foot straight trunk and same height.
    When and where i should chop off the trunk to get taper in a few years ? I mean how ar down the Apax down i must make the chop. Would two third of the height be good enough or half way down the height.
    My final target for the heightest three is about 70 cm after many years and 3-4 or 5 cuttings.
    Also can you guide me about route work or trunk base splitting to get a quicker result ?
    Or can you rcoment a good source of information or aricle or a site so i can get the information i need
    Thanks Jelle.
    Have a drink on me 🌲🌲🌲🙏🙏🙏

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  29 дней назад +1

      You are basically asking for a 10-year guideline. I doubt you will find it. Part of this is also your artistry that defines the steps. All choices can result in a forest, just all looking differently.
      I think it is important to get trees that are of inequal size and height for forest plantings. So I would keep 2 this size and plant them in a larger pot for 2 years, just letting them grow. 3 I would cut as small as I dared, leaving only one small branch to work with. And the rest prune to different heights.
      As these grow out, already wire trunkline and branches. Once these branches are 2 years old, bends take a long time to set. I am not a fan of trunk splitting tbh. Take some cuttings so you have really small plants to add to the edges later on.

    • @MehranAshkanian
      @MehranAshkanian 29 дней назад +1

      Thanks Jelle. Very well explained ​@@GrowingBonsai

    • @MehranAshkanian
      @MehranAshkanian 28 дней назад +1

      Thanks Jelle
      Thanks for your guidance. Should I decide to use trunk splitting method I sure will let you know .
      Good like to you and keep up giving out great videos as you are doing

  • @TOMSAI
    @TOMSAI 2 года назад

    Wow what a cool tree ! And thx for showing how you get More backbutts ! 👌👍

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад +1

      You bet! I do hope you can get some more backbudding too :)
      The tree itself is a former hedgerow!

    • @TOMSAI
      @TOMSAI 2 года назад

      @@GrowingBonsai yes i Hope i will get some butts too .

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад +1

      @@TOMSAI Buds? Butts? I think there is a difference?

    • @TOMSAI
      @TOMSAI 2 года назад

      @@GrowingBonsai 😂😂 yes i think so too

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад +1

      @@TOMSAI 🤣

  • @mokdog666
    @mokdog666 2 года назад

    Going to be a beautiful tree! What is the purpose of cut piece of pot around the base of the tree ?

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад

      Haha, very simple I am afraid.. To keep diggong birds out of the Nebari. I have several things in place as birdguards.

  • @alessandro4250
    @alessandro4250 Год назад

    Hi, nice video!
    I have a question, if I have for example one long branch (60 cm) with all the foliage in the apex, what I have to do to back bud at the start of the branch?
    Can I cut away all the foliage to backbud or the branch will die?

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  Год назад

      Hi Allesandro, if that is a yew, normally they backbud really well. WHen not the tree might be lacking energy? Is it generally growing well? I pretty much always get backbudding, assuming the branch gets lots of light and the tree is healthy. These actions work generally after you let the tree grow well, and then you prune strongly on all strong branches.

  • @MehranAshkanian
    @MehranAshkanian 7 месяцев назад

    I just bought one today and was looking for information how to keep it in good health and make a Bonsai out of it
    Thanks

  • @blaqfish
    @blaqfish Год назад

    Hello, I bought a yew from a big box store. I live in Georgia and it's July. Nothing has been done to it. Should it be wired first. Wait a few then prune to create back budding. Or should I prune it first the wait to start wiring. I almost feel as if I have spent money on something that is too complicated. I see a lot of videos with field grown trunks that are huge but most importantly, not yews.
    Can the secret be shared with this novice. It's outside now and growing well so I don't want to create a mess and kill it. The branches shoot straight up so I know it will have to be wired but I don't know the sequence. Any help you can give me would be great.Your channel was the first that talked about yews so I'm following for help. Thank you for sharing

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  Год назад

      Have a quick search on the channel. There should be 3 or so videos about yew/taxus. In general it is good to have a year between work on the branches and repot. But Yews are tolerant trees of abuse. Both orders will work.Healthy foliage helps with re-rooting in good substrate.
      Often it is easiest to wire young branches and trim thick old branches off, as Yew is very flexible and will return to shae after even 2 years of being wired. Backbudding is a story on its own, handled in the video!

  • @MehranAshkanian
    @MehranAshkanian 3 месяца назад

    Hi Kelli. Can I prune the leaves in middle of October ? I just bought a Giant Yew with double thick trunks and trunks have natural bends going away from each other. It's very healthy and very bushy

  • @BraddersMusic
    @BraddersMusic 6 месяцев назад

    Hi - I have long yew hedge on the front of my garden and would like to cut it back and if possible use the cuttings to propagate some bonsai yews! Any thoughts ?

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  6 месяцев назад

      Yes: ruclips.net/video/KZEfhn6lPHM/видео.html

  • @BonsaiJo
    @BonsaiJo 6 месяцев назад

    What is the difference between Podocarpus Macrophyllus
    and the tree Taxus cuspidata

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  Месяц назад

      em.. Very different species and plant families..

  • @StephenTurnerVlogs
    @StephenTurnerVlogs 2 года назад

    Will it be fine to do now?
    End of summer/ start off autumn?
    I'm in Ireland.

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад +1

      Hi Stephen, it can still be done, but do not expect buds to open still. They would open in Spring.

    • @StephenTurnerVlogs
      @StephenTurnerVlogs 2 года назад +1

      @@GrowingBonsai Thank you 😊

  • @gayefanner731
    @gayefanner731 2 года назад +3

    Gordon Bennet !!!

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад

      Are you suggesting something here?

    • @gayefanner731
      @gayefanner731 2 года назад +1

      Yes, what an awful lot of work! We’ve got enough to do with watering,feeding, shading, defoliating, potting n cosseting harvested air layers, working, parenting n everything living entails! I mean, come on...!!! ✌️

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад +1

      @@gayefanner731 Ohw, but Bonsai is a verb: To Bonsai! That means, work is core!

    • @gayefanner731
      @gayefanner731 2 года назад +1

      It’s a noun: tree in a pot

  • @derekgillan7314
    @derekgillan7314 2 месяца назад

    THX

  • @christianehilker5422
    @christianehilker5422 2 года назад +1

    Hallo
    Wäre schön wenn in Deutsch auch ein paar Videos wären
    Lg

    • @GrowingBonsai
      @GrowingBonsai  2 года назад

      Hallo Christiane, danke. Aber.. Leider ist mein deutsch nur halbsweg verstandlich. Ich glaube auch, die meiste leute konnen sich mit English abfinden, auf mindestens mer als auf Deutsch!