There is no point of growing bonsai if it is stressful! I have had almost everything go wrong over the years, so I have learned to forget about the dead trees and concentrate on the living ones. You have to learn to accept that you will loose trees to insects, weather and risky pruning.
Nigel Saunders, The Bonsai Zone If you don't mind me asking, for how long have you been growing bonsai? You have such spectacular specimens. I particularly love your Larch forest... it reflects to perfection what we see on a larger scale. Loosing some trees is the risk we take with this hobby. I've lost my share of trees before I perfected my skills, which still need refining. I live in Portugal and believe me, some trees are hard to maintain in this hot and dry climate. I have a reasonably sized Japanese Maple and every summer the leaves get burned, even in the shade. However, it is still gratifying to see the red leaves sprouting in April. My Olive tree (Olea Europaea), unlike the maple, does incredibly well in this weather. Right now its filled with olives! Keep up the great work.
Nigel Saunders, The Bonsai Zone I love them, in fact. I only wish I had a garden as big as yours, since i'm running out of space. Pests where I live are fortunately rare, since the heat and lack of moisture prevents them naturally. I have other problems to deal with, like the soil drying up quickly. Growing bonsai is a constant learning process, different from place to place. When I visit Canada i'll make sure to visit your bonsai show!
Thank you, Nigel - it has been a pleasure to watch many of these trees develop over the last few years. Can't thank you enough for the knowledge and entertainment. I hope the show is a blast. All the best.
Nigel, thank you for your videos and insights into my favorite hobby. I’ve learned much from you. That’s a big reason I keep coming back to your channel. You do such a great job of explaining why you’re doing what you’re doing. The lessons you give and the trees you grow inspire me and I hope you continue sharing with all of us!
Ah...The best tree in your collection...The Bird's Nest Spruce has come such a long way and just continues to impress...It stand and landscaping has elevated to a Penjing in my opinion...Such grandeur at this point and I'm only caught up to 2018...Another screen shot for my shop wall...Thanks for sharing...
Great choices to enter for the show, and I'm glad you picked the old Ficus microcarpa. Always cool to see how small changes to a planting can totally change the feel of a tree like your Bird's Nest Spruce. It went from forest to coastal with just a little moss pruning and the addition of some sand...awesome!
So happy to see that bougainvillea in flower. The Bird's Nest Spruce is really looking awesome! No walnuts to hide in plants down here. The best our squirrels can do are some palm seeds. LOL The Austrian Pine is looking GREAT. Like it! So glad that you are pairing that Ficus Religiosa with Walli again. Good decision to save 15 different trees for next year's show. Agree with your thinking about shows with the same trees year after year. Thanks for sharing the process of show preparation of trees with us.
Another great video. For the life of me I cannot figure out why 39 people would click the thumb-down button. They must be competitors or are super jealous of your knowledge and abilities. Either way, they've shown their selfish nature. Have a Blessed Day, Nigel, to you and yours.
Hi Nigel, I have some advice that will maybe help. If you let your mos grow too long, it's better to remove the mos carefully (in one big clump) and prune the brown part on the bottem away. If you have the wanted hight, you just place the mos on top like you normally would do. That way you can prune lush mos down and still keep its green lush look! Good luck with the show! And sorry for my English
I agree - cutting away the dead lower layers is my preferred method for reducing the overall height, I do it for most of my mosses each spring after they start greening up. If you tear it and look from the side you can see the line between the dead lower layers and live section. It is still good to trim the green surface to keep it as short and in-scale as possible.
You will love acacia rubra when it flowers. It's a beautiful tree, very red. I'm from a city called the City of Acacias. Very anxious to see the progress of your ones. I have huge ones in my house. They are all over the City. It's out country tree. And the Embondeiro as well. Giant tree that one. Very excited here. You are brilliant Nigel. Love the show.
Bonsai jokes. Love it. Wish I could rely on rain water. South Texas bonsai is a tad more water hungry. Have a great time at the show. Can't wait for episodes from the show.
The Ficus roots are beautiful like a baby smiling without teeth ... would love to see them next year ... Enjoy the show and if you have some footage please share with us ... :)
+ Nigel Saunders, The Bonsai Zone Good luck with your show, I'm sure many of the people will appreciate and admire your tree's! Looking forward to the next video, maybe some of the other tree's in your Bonsai club. Cheers!
Have u considered tilting the pot like 6o゚to make it easier for the loose moss to fall out? Plus maybe when trimming, dont let the scissors snap to its end/tip & keep a constant forward movement & cut with the midsection of the scissor to make a rounder natural look?
Hey Nigel, you should consider turning a Coleus Plant into a bonsai. It's not normally trained to look like a tree but if there's anyone that can do it its you. It would be a pretty cool project and its a pretty fast grower.
I think in the spruce tree there's too much contrast between the brown naked bark at the base of the trunk and the upper section which is all covered in green lichens. I thought you would brush off at least some of those lichens.
Super bummed I didn’t make it to the show I would have loved to see your trees in person 😞 when you gotta work you gotta work lol. I’ve seen almost all of your videos now and I’ve got 1 quick question are ficus microcarpas and retusas the same thing I’ve herd you refer to that last tree as both and I’ve been sold a retusa and a microcarpa so I’m realy curious
Yes they are the same, I believe a Ficus microcarpa "retusa" is a variety of the Ficus microcarpa. The Ginseng is also a variety of the Ficus microcarpa also.
Great video as always, quick question I live in Alberta, what's the best place to purchase bonsai online? I only seen one or two places and the selection is not much... Thanks , love your vids
@@TheBonsaiZone ha ha good for you mate. That's winter temps for us 😂😂. I'm just about to break out the shorts myself. A week of over 20'c here. Spring has sprung 😂😂
Nigel, I have this succulent that I've been considering training as a bonsai - I think it's a graptosedum hybrid but I'm not 100% sure. It seems to naturally grow in a tall formation and after I took cuttings of it this past spring it took on a very branching form. I was thinking of doing this ever since I saw your aloe bonsai and I was captivated by the idea of keeping a succulent bonsai. Do you have advice, other than normal succulent care? I know I'll have to be very conservative with root pruning a succulent, but last time I repotted it the roots were quite healthy and I find that all the cuttings I take of it root very vigorously.
Most succulents will root really easily in the summer when the weather is nice and warm. I do let the roots dry out for at least a week before giving them any water after root pruning. This gives them time to dry up and heal around the cut point. I'll be growing more succulent bonsai in the future, I find them really nice! My Crown of Thorns are doing really well, the main tree and all the cuttings! Most succulents can be watered and fertilized more than you would think in the summer, as long as the days are sunny and warm. Too much water and cool cloudy weather is risky.
Hello Nigel, I live in Brazil and I'd like to know how you're able to grow boungavilleas in Canada... are the green houses good enough to maintain the plant safe from the cold?? Greetings from Brazil!
I have a sun room on the side of the house, as the temperatures start to get lower in fall, all the tropical trees come inside for the winter. They get good sunshine from a south facing window. My outdoor greenhouse sits empty in the winter.
Hey Nigel what is your secret for cultivating your moss? I keep trying to use dyed new Zealand sphagnum and collected green moss sifted to particle size 1/16-1/4in 1:1 but I end up growing more algae than anything. Any tips for creating a nice sheet of show quality moss? Maybe I missed a video on the past. Let me know. Best of luck in you upcoming show.
He gets it from the cracks in his sidwalk. It grows in shaded areas for the most part all around my home. Although I'm jealous because I cannot find any "sun" moss variant. That is the more velvet looking moss that does well in sun. The shade moss drys out very quickly unless you have a greenhouse or mist it several times a day.
The Asparagus fern is 20 years old and the "trunk" is just made up of roots only. I just kept slowly raising it out of the soil with each re potting. In humid weather it will grow new aerial roots down into the soil. You do have to remove a lot of roots with each re potting as they quickly fill the container!
Guidance required on propagating moss along with bondai pot. I am living in water restricted area near coastal region. Recently i ve collected moss from rainy forest region during my vacation tour. I kept some of moss lumps in closed containers to keep them moist. Some i ve placed on my pot outside but not in direct sunlight. Now its gree colour is turning to nyellow. Plz guide me on that.
It is best to collect moss that is growing in full sun. Take a layer of soil with the moss and plant it on top of a good draining bonsai soil. The moss does require frequent watering, fertilizing and misting. You may be better to grow a ground cover of small Sedum if water is a problem. Here is a link to info on Sedum... www.drought-smart-plants.com/5-favorite-miniature-stonecrop.html
I collect my moss from the sidewalks and driveways in my neighborhood. I collect moss that is growing in full sun. The moss needs to be watered and fertilized frequently and it needs to be misted 3 to 4 times on a hot afternoon. Once it dries out, it takes a long time for it to green up again.
Nigel I was wandering iv killed some bonsai tree in my days I was wondering how many trees have u killed in your life time and why ... iv killed my trees because of over watering, so root rot essentially.. I was so excited I pretty much killed them with love
I worked as a product designer for much of my life, then got into 3d modelling and rendering with a home business. This lead me into stage and set design for many big productions all around the world. Here is a link to some of the work I have done, i designed the bus and the locomotive for the Calgary Stampede show and have worked on design and layouts for the show for the past 5 years, really fun work, but long hours and tight deadlines! ruclips.net/video/6avhdt-Csik/видео.html ruclips.net/video/AV7yyi-0x9Y/видео.html
That is an Asparagus fern, they are native to South Africa. They are common in hanging baskets around here. They are not a tree, but really a weed and are very invasive in warm climates.
Watching these videos really takes the stress out of me. Bonsai is healing.
There is no point of growing bonsai if it is stressful! I have had almost everything go wrong over the years, so I have learned to forget about the dead trees and concentrate on the living ones. You have to learn to accept that you will loose trees to insects, weather and risky pruning.
Nigel Saunders, The Bonsai Zone If you don't mind me asking, for how long have you been growing bonsai? You have such spectacular specimens. I particularly love your Larch forest... it reflects to perfection what we see on a larger scale.
Loosing some trees is the risk we take with this hobby. I've lost my share of trees before I perfected my skills, which still need refining. I live in Portugal and believe me, some trees are hard to maintain in this hot and dry climate. I have a reasonably sized Japanese Maple and every summer the leaves get burned, even in the shade. However, it is still gratifying to see the red leaves sprouting in April.
My Olive tree (Olea Europaea), unlike the maple, does incredibly well in this weather. Right now its filled with olives!
Keep up the great work.
I have been growing bonsai for 25 years now! Sounds like you enjoy your trees, this is good to see!
Nigel Saunders, The Bonsai Zone I love them, in fact. I only wish I had a garden as big as yours, since i'm running out of space.
Pests where I live are fortunately rare, since the heat and lack of moisture prevents them naturally. I have other problems to deal with, like the soil drying up quickly. Growing bonsai is a constant learning process, different from place to place.
When I visit Canada i'll make sure to visit your bonsai show!
Thank you, Nigel - it has been a pleasure to watch many of these trees develop over the last few years. Can't thank you enough for the knowledge and entertainment. I hope the show is a blast. All the best.
That birds nest spruce looks so dreamy absolutely stunning
Thank you, much of the work was done by mother nature!
Nigel, thank you for your videos and insights into my favorite hobby. I’ve learned much from you. That’s a big reason I keep coming back to your channel. You do such a great job of explaining why you’re doing what you’re doing. The lessons you give and the trees you grow inspire me and I hope you continue sharing with all of us!
I really enjoyed this series watching and learning how to prepare bonsai for a show. Those aerial roots on your bougainvillea are really cool.
My wife finds aerial roots very creepy, I love them!
Best of luck at the show! I bet your bonsai trees are going to attract the most attention.
Stunning Nigel, really inspiring, that stand for the birds nest spruce is so realistic.
Nigel you genius the growth is stunning. you are a master my friend 🙏
Ah...The best tree in your collection...The Bird's Nest Spruce has come such a long way and just continues to impress...It stand and landscaping has elevated to a Penjing in my opinion...Such grandeur at this point and I'm only caught up to 2018...Another screen shot for my shop wall...Thanks for sharing...
Great choices to enter for the show, and I'm glad you picked the old Ficus microcarpa. Always cool to see how small changes to a planting can totally change the feel of a tree like your Bird's Nest Spruce. It went from forest to coastal with just a little moss pruning and the addition of some sand...awesome!
So happy to see that bougainvillea in flower. The Bird's Nest Spruce is really looking awesome! No walnuts to hide in plants down here. The best our squirrels can do are some palm seeds. LOL The Austrian Pine is looking GREAT. Like it! So glad that you are pairing that Ficus Religiosa with Walli again. Good decision to save 15 different trees for next year's show. Agree with your thinking about shows with the same trees year after year. Thanks for sharing the process of show preparation of trees with us.
At 23:20 in the video....
Thank is by far my favorite tree of you’re ever.
I love how there is so many roots
Trees are looking very good for the show. Have a great show!
This is my favorite bonsai tree channel on RUclips!
Nigel is the best
Scrap Jackal its the only
Yes your choice is perfect.
Check out Bjorn Bjorholm he's great too
I have seen Bjorn before, but I recommend we are the bonsai supply
Wow! That Bougainvillea makes a pretty bonsai, Nigel.
Thank you Obalajadia!
Asperagus Bonsai - You are really very creative. I love this tree.
Thank you, it's an odd one, but I like it!
Enjoy the show. You often do things I would not expect with your trees or landscaping so it is alwasy interesting.
Another great video. For the life of me I cannot figure out why 39 people would click the thumb-down button. They must be competitors or are super jealous of your knowledge and abilities. Either way, they've shown their selfish nature. Have a Blessed Day, Nigel, to you and yours.
Hi Nigel, I have some advice that will maybe help. If you let your mos grow too long, it's better to remove the mos carefully (in one big clump) and prune the brown part on the bottem away. If you have the wanted hight, you just place the mos on top like you normally would do. That way you can prune lush mos down and still keep its green lush look! Good luck with the show! And sorry for my English
I agree - cutting away the dead lower layers is my preferred method for reducing the overall height, I do it for most of my mosses each spring after they start greening up. If you tear it and look from the side you can see the line between the dead lower layers and live section. It is still good to trim the green surface to keep it as short and in-scale as possible.
Have fun, they're looking great and beautiful !🌻🐝🌻🌻
Watching your videos while knitting almost turns me into a zombie and I say that the best way possible
Thank you, just stay away from eating brains!
You will love acacia rubra when it flowers. It's a beautiful tree, very red. I'm from a city called the City of Acacias. Very anxious to see the progress of your ones. I have huge ones in my house. They are all over the City. It's out country tree. And the Embondeiro as well. Giant tree that one. Very excited here. You are brilliant Nigel. Love the show.
You surley have a great imagination ...Bravo Nigel
Great trees. Thanks Nigel for all the beautiful n informative videos.
Regards
I just love you show enjoy the club show Nigel
23:38 the level of details... that trunk looks gorgeous!
Those aerial roots are awesome. Maybe a quick video of the show? Either way enjoy !👌
Bonsai jokes. Love it. Wish I could rely on rain water. South Texas bonsai is a tad more water hungry. Have a great time at the show. Can't wait for episodes from the show.
The Ficus roots are beautiful like a baby smiling without teeth ... would love to see them next year ... Enjoy the show and if you have some footage please share with us ... :)
Hope you all have a great day out 👍👍
+ Nigel Saunders, The Bonsai Zone Good luck with your show, I'm sure many of the people will appreciate and admire your tree's! Looking forward to the next video, maybe some of the other tree's in your Bonsai club. Cheers!
Oh, by the way, Nigel, thanks for including the avatar grove in to the show. That is one of my favorites.
Thank you, I think the forest has a lot of potential, it is one of my favorites too!
Amazing as always! Can't wait for the show video :)
Wish you a great success in bonsai exhibition.
I'm so excited for you about the show. Your trees look great. Did you know you can make tea with Boganvillia flowers?
Have u considered tilting the pot like 6o゚to make it easier for the loose moss to fall out?
Plus maybe when trimming, dont let the scissors snap to its end/tip & keep a constant forward movement & cut with the midsection of the scissor to make a rounder natural look?
you could keep the fallen flowers and place them around the bonsai for the show, or in a nice looking dish like the start of a pot-pourri.
Enjoy the show Nigel, love the birds nest spruce and your videos, how is your Acers would like to see an update as I also am growing a couple. Peace
Just checkin in for an update on your awesome hair styles, nice work.
Thanks!
Hey Nigel, you should consider turning a Coleus Plant into a bonsai. It's not normally trained to look like a tree but if there's anyone that can do it its you. It would be a pretty cool project and its a pretty fast grower.
I made an attempt once, but the oldest trunk always dies after a few months.
Iam also gonna make an asparagus fern bonsai. Thank u Nigel for the idea.
Congrats Mr.Nigel
I think in the spruce tree there's too much contrast between the brown naked bark at the base of the trunk and the upper section which is all covered in green lichens. I thought you would brush off at least some of those lichens.
Nigel can you do a video about how do you grow your moss please???
盆栽愛があふれていますね!
はい、ここカナダでも!私たちには、盆栽に適した多くの天然のカナダの木があります。カナダは木々に非常に自然主義的なスタイルを持っているようですが、私たちが私たちの周りに見るものを反映していると思います。
Hi Nigel, great video! How and when did you acquire your Austrian Pine? It's looking very nice!
It would be really amazing if you could make kind of coniferous video session with all the pros/cons special treatment and other essentials :)
I hope you have a wonderful day
I like the second tree very much.
The show was great!!
Good luck at the show. 🍀
Super bummed I didn’t make it to the show I would have loved to see your trees in person 😞 when you gotta work you gotta work lol. I’ve seen almost all of your videos now and I’ve got 1 quick question are ficus microcarpas and retusas the same thing I’ve herd you refer to that last tree as both and I’ve been sold a retusa and a microcarpa so I’m realy curious
Yes they are the same, I believe a Ficus microcarpa "retusa" is a variety of the Ficus microcarpa. The Ginseng is also a variety of the Ficus microcarpa also.
They look great! Do you like the asparagus fern so much because now it has a hair do like yours perhaps! 😂😀 Be well!
Nigel, would you consider using lime sulfur on the spruce dead wood? why or why not?
Will you be doing another viewers' pics section any time soon? I sent you a picture of my tiny asparagus fern!
How do i improve moss production in my bonsai soil?
Try making your soil wet or moist at most of the time. Hopefully it will form some moss
I like to transplant some washed wild grown moss to start off my pots and let it spread from there.
Hi Nigel! Hope your show goes well!
Great video as always, quick question I live in Alberta, what's the best place to purchase bonsai online? I only seen one or two places and the selection is not much... Thanks , love your vids
I haven't ever ordered a tree on line, maybe someone else reading this can help?
Thanks, good question!
Well done mate some truly nice trees 😁😁
Thank you Sam, we just went from 34 C down to 14 C in two days, but I've still got my shorts on!
@@TheBonsaiZone ha ha good for you mate. That's winter temps for us 😂😂. I'm just about to break out the shorts myself. A week of over 20'c here. Spring has sprung 😂😂
Welp i felt sad for the wall-e tree. The lush leaves would have looked more inviting. For me.
It’s symbolic gesture for hope 🍃
Nigel, I have this succulent that I've been considering training as a bonsai - I think it's a graptosedum hybrid but I'm not 100% sure. It seems to naturally grow in a tall formation and after I took cuttings of it this past spring it took on a very branching form. I was thinking of doing this ever since I saw your aloe bonsai and I was captivated by the idea of keeping a succulent bonsai. Do you have advice, other than normal succulent care? I know I'll have to be very conservative with root pruning a succulent, but last time I repotted it the roots were quite healthy and I find that all the cuttings I take of it root very vigorously.
Most succulents will root really easily in the summer when the weather is nice and warm. I do let the roots dry out for at least a week before giving them any water after root pruning. This gives them time to dry up and heal around the cut point. I'll be growing more succulent bonsai in the future, I find them really nice! My Crown of Thorns are doing really well, the main tree and all the cuttings! Most succulents can be watered and fertilized more than you would think in the summer, as long as the days are sunny and warm. Too much water and cool cloudy weather is risky.
@@TheBonsaiZone Thank you Nigel!
Hello Nigel, I live in Brazil and I'd like to know how you're able to grow boungavilleas in Canada... are the green houses good enough to maintain the plant safe from the cold??
Greetings from Brazil!
I have a sun room on the side of the house, as the temperatures start to get lower in fall, all the tropical trees come inside for the winter. They get good sunshine from a south facing window. My outdoor greenhouse sits empty in the winter.
11:43 Your haircut compliments your tree perfectly!
Thank you, both kinda wild!
Last tree is very beautiful father Nigel...
Would you ever come to Colorado to see/collect some trees? I know some great spots.
Hey Nigel what is your secret for cultivating your moss? I keep trying to use dyed new Zealand sphagnum and collected green moss sifted to particle size 1/16-1/4in 1:1 but I end up growing more algae than anything. Any tips for creating a nice sheet of show quality moss? Maybe I missed a video on the past. Let me know. Best of luck in you upcoming show.
He gets it from the cracks in his sidwalk. It grows in shaded areas for the most part all around my home. Although I'm jealous because I cannot find any "sun" moss variant. That is the more velvet looking moss that does well in sun. The shade moss drys out very quickly unless you have a greenhouse or mist it several times a day.
He whispers sweet nothings to the moss and it grows for him.
haha
@@240Sil thanks!
asparagus fern looks super good man
Thank you, it's a strange plant for bonsai, but I do really like it!
All the best nigel
Hey Nigel!!! how old is the asparagus and
How did you create that trunk? did you put something in the middle of the white roots?
The Asparagus fern is 20 years old and the "trunk" is just made up of roots only. I just kept slowly raising it out of the soil with each re potting. In humid weather it will grow new aerial roots down into the soil. You do have to remove a lot of roots with each re potting as they quickly fill the container!
Ohh nice, thank you very much
Hi Nigel! I love your account! What kind of sand do you use?
I use playground sand, it is a washed sand that they sell at hardware stores. It is used in children's sandboxes.
Thank you Gonzalo!
Is your asparagus bonsai one plant or many together to make one . I am wanting to start one if you could answer that would be great.
It is just one plant, it started out a really small one, that I was going to use as a accent plant. It's just grows larger every year!
How many trees you have Nigel 😅 ?
Have a nice day
Thank you, I'm giving a talk on bonsai today at a greenhouse. Should be fun!
Can i ask something i want to grow a bondai tree from seeds and i dont know which seeds do you know some nice seeds ?
I fron Brazil, like you job! 👏
Thank you, very nice to hear!
Guidance required on propagating moss along with bondai pot.
I am living in water restricted area near coastal region. Recently i ve collected moss from rainy forest region during my vacation tour.
I kept some of moss lumps in closed containers to keep them moist. Some i ve placed on my pot outside but not in direct sunlight. Now its gree colour is turning to nyellow.
Plz guide me on that.
It is best to collect moss that is growing in full sun. Take a layer of soil with the moss and plant it on top of a good draining bonsai soil. The moss does require frequent watering, fertilizing and misting. You may be better to grow a ground cover of small Sedum if water is a problem. Here is a link to info on Sedum...
www.drought-smart-plants.com/5-favorite-miniature-stonecrop.html
Hey Nigel, is bonsai your hobby or source of income too? 😊 Fan for over 2 years now...
Hey Nigel - I'm just starting out. What material do you use for your drainage screens? Thanks very much
I buy a roll of nylon window screen and cut it into small squares.
@@TheBonsaiZone Ok I'll try that - thanks!
do you have any bonsai you have started from seed and still have
good choice I tell you good luck!
how old is your Ficus microcarpa? beautiful tree!
It is just turning 26, it was started from a seed!
How do you keep the moss growing? My moss just dies away! Also do you buy moss?
I collect my moss from the sidewalks and driveways in my neighborhood. I collect moss that is growing in full sun. The moss needs to be watered and fertilized frequently and it needs to be misted 3 to 4 times on a hot afternoon. Once it dries out, it takes a long time for it to green up again.
@@TheBonsaiZone thanks for the quick response Nigel!
Good luck sir ✌
i love this video
Thank you, I see it's getting popular!
First comment. Yippee... Amazing sir u r👌😍
You have entered the Foist Zone!
how many year has the last tree been growing?
Hello friend helpful video
Very nice video sir
very nice video
Thank you very much!
Nigel I was wandering iv killed some bonsai tree in my days I was wondering how many trees have u killed in your life time and why ... iv killed my trees because of over watering, so root rot essentially.. I was so excited I pretty much killed them with love
Nigel, what did/do you do for a living?
I worked as a product designer for much of my life, then got into 3d modelling and rendering with a home business. This lead me into stage and set design for many big productions all around the world. Here is a link to some of the work I have done, i designed the bus and the locomotive for the Calgary Stampede show and have worked on design and layouts for the show for the past 5 years, really fun work, but long hours and tight deadlines!
ruclips.net/video/6avhdt-Csik/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/AV7yyi-0x9Y/видео.html
I’m jealous of you
Ahh the aerial roots! :0)
que tipo de arena utilizas??
Butyfull bonesai i loved it sir... 😘
where can I buy a tree like the one in 14:21 or should I find it in the forest
That is an Asparagus fern, they are native to South Africa. They are common in hanging baskets around here. They are not a tree, but really a weed and are very invasive in warm climates.
thank you
Glad you enjoyed the video!
Awesome sir
Going good!
Thank you, slowly getting better!
amazing. thanx a lot...
Sir please tell which insecticide and fungicide you use on pine trees
I don't use any insecticides or fungicides on my trees. I will use 1 part soap to 40 parts water to kill insects like scale and aphids.
@@TheBonsaiZone thanks sir