Chinese Elm Pruning Part 3... - Greenwood Bonsai
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- Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024
- In this video Corin executes the 3rd and final prune on this Chinese Elm Bonsai. Thanks to all that have followed this tree along its journey, check out part 1 & 2 below.
PART 1
• Pruning Chinese Elm Bo...
PART 2
• Chinese Elm Pruning. P...
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WEBSITE - www.bonsai.co.uk
You are a real magician when it comes to explaining to the beginner in the hobby 😎Dennis
Hi Corin I am sure the owner of this tree will be super happy. And to be able to watch the progress is a gift..Keep it up Bless you..
It’s amazing how resilient these little trees are not only have you shown us how much you can cut back but how much they Improve over the relatively short time you have been doing this one, I’m sure your encouragement for the rest of us to actually cut back harder in future is the way to go as I for one realise I’m sure I don’t take enough off mine 😜
💫💫🥰🥰🥳
WOWSER!! It's bluddy rampant!! 😲
Fabulous job Corin 👍😍
Masterful ~ all 3 videos! And Corin, looks like you may have had a little trim too. LOL. I learn so much fro your work ~ thank you for sharing !
Thank you, Corin, for showing us your fabulous work. Always a pleasure.
Looking to buy a tree for my son whos 17. Just watching and reading up is amazing what you need to know when having these trees. Cant wait to buy one for xmas
You’re a true master Corin you must have been destined to have this career through your father Harry👍
New to the hobby and still in the research phase...I loved your three part series and definitely want to give bonsai creation a serious consideration. Thank you for sharing your expertise!
Thank you for showing how to boldly cut back a vigorous tree and then how well it recovers. This gives me courage to try it. I am a reluctant pruner!
Beautifully done
Great 3 part series and a beautiful tree loved seeing the work done on it including the trimming and the regrowth , looks fab i'm sure the owner will be very happy!
Glad you enjoyed it
Baie mooi, geniet jou geselstrant terwyl jy werk.kan jou liefde vir die bome duidelik sien.Groete van Rita 88 jaar jaar jonk
Lovely Elm and it looks beautiful now it’s had a nice prune. I think I’ll treat myself to a new tree 😀🙏🏻
Brilliant. Really informative for a novice in understanding how the tree reacts to pruning in that way.
Great video, thank you for sharing your knowledge, I've just let mine grow since Christmas and I was not brave enough to trim it back until today. This video has given me confidence. Beautiful tree also, I bet the owner is extremely happy.
Glad it was helpful!
Wonderful series Corin. Thanks
Bonsai phill very good species of tree to use for bonsai well done corin thanks mate keep it up mate
Standing back in amazement, so glad I came across your channel.
Great video. Glad I've discovered this channel. Thanks for the tips!
Wow you really have done an excellent job there.
Probably the best chinese elm I've ever seen.
Really beautiful tree.
That was a year ago, seen it since and its even better !
Hi Corin. A really brilliant and informative run of videos, please keep them going. Is it possible to cover European Larch in a future one please?
Funny you say that about Larches, keep an eye out on our channel this Saturday !
I like the format of this series cool to see the progress.
Wow fantastic growth from that tree! Thanks for the follow up. Love your video's.
So much more beautiful after the last prune. Thank you for this demo. Hope you will do more on Maples.
Very good work, thank you for sharing.
Keep on making movies Colin, enjoying these 👍looking out goe thé next one. Thx
It's really helpful to see these close-in-time changes to the tree
FELICITACIONES.... HAS LOGRADO UN EXCELENTE ESPECIMEN CON TU TRABAJO... DESDE ARGENTINA.... SALUDOS Y QUE NO SE CORTEN LOS VIDEOS...
A beautiful finish!
Great to see start to finish, thank you
Nice project, well done!
Excellent work ive realy enjoyed that im new to bonsia so im watching all your videos
Great work.👍
Am late to this series of videos, but really appreciate the ability to follow its progress. Also the need to trim maybe monthly? I think I'll give one a go.
I am amazed ! Thank you.
Great videos thank you
Great trees to work on using clip & grow. The small leaf size, especially if grown outdoors, allows lovely mame or shohin trees to be grown.
I live in Oklahoma and these are super common landscape trees which are gorgeous when they mature. What I find most fascinating is that they can be evergreen or deciduous depending on how much cold you expose them to. So climatically versatile. I used to live in Phoenix and they are commonly planted there too. I can personally attest to witnessing them take as high temps as 118°F or as low as -14°F last year here in Oklahoma during the polar vortex. They didn’t skip a beat under either extreme heat or cold.
Reality great. Showing the progress it is unreal how the growth of the elms is so fast amazing thanks for sharing.
Wow amazing bonsai. Super
Very Nice work 👍
Thanks Corin.
Thank you for the informatively entertaining video! Your videos are underrated and you deserve a great deal of subs, and like.
Cheers guys as usual this channel delivers
Looks great.
Cheers mate for another great video.
Always love to see your content. Bless you 👏🏼
Great video
First!
Keep up the great work!
Any suggestions on the best indoor lighting for my Chinese Elm? Our flat doesn’t get great sunlight
What a fantastic improvement. I would love to know how to trim a Chinese Elm group planting, the ones i have are very straight and they were chopped at some stage before i bought it.
New subscriber 😊
Very nice
I love this bonsai
just watched all 7 weeks in 20 minutes. Cant wait to stare at my new Chinese Elm for an actual 7 weeks just to see that I messed up somewhere XD
What type of Scissors do you use and where can I get them? I love the Chinese Elm such a fast grower, works well in So. Cal.
I use these www.bonsai.co.uk/product/stainless-steel-ryuga-rs-trimming-shear/
Wow!!
Could anyone here gives me some advice , please..? I have a Chinese Elm that has an area that needs another branch .. I have shoots coming from the trunk in this area, but I don't know how to nurture one of these new shoots into a branch ... Do I allow the shoot to grow to the desired length of branch I'd like.... Or do I cut back this new branch back to first/second set of leaves and allow new shoots to grow and extend, and so on? I can't find any info on forming new branches, just the cutting back of existing ones.. Any help or advice would be much appreciated. Thank you .....😉👍🏼
You need to let it grow if you want it to thicken up. Have a look at our Siberian elm video, I grew branches on that tree and show it in stages.
@@greenwoodbonsaistudio Thank you so much for your reply. Very much appreciated. Gonna go check those vids now...
👍👌
Lovely vibrant tree
I’ve a Chinese elm maybe a little bigger than that but the leaves never looks as green or as dense as that. It’s been repotted in spring 2020 and I water abs feed it regularly
What could that be
How do i get my tiny chinese elm to grow nice thick trunk like that? Just plant it into a massive pot for few years?
That will help, this has been owned for over 20 years
My favourite species wish mine looked this good 😪
Question: can Chinese elms be kept exclusively indoors? I live in a flat and don't have outdoor space. I do have 2 Fukien Tea trees and a jade bonsai that are doing fine though. Temp in the flat is between 68 to 72 F. Thx
They can , we have customers that have kept them inside for over 30 years
I bought a elm from someone who had let it grow like a shrub . I can’t figure out what to do with it. It has a very nice t drunk. But, they cut the top out of it and it doesn’t have a Pacific Apex. Where and how could I start to reshape it. It’s a truck with many stems coming directly off trunk straight up.
Have you checked out part on in this Chinese Elm video, I think it will help you with what your are thinking of doing.
I can't help thinking that the top bit could be removed leaving a nice domed top.
as I mentioned in the video peter, the bare structure doesn't make that a wise decision when you can see the tree in person. As it leaves no dominant apex and reduces taper created.
@@greenwoodbonsaistudio OK. I think it's more personal taste. I prefer a more natural domed shape as you would see a broadleaf tree in nature where there's no single dominant apex. Currently this looks more like a conifer shape, but that's a completely valid design choice. It also depends on what the customer wants of course.
I understand that these are regular trees but pruning is what keeps them small
I've had a Chinese elm for about 6 months. Everything has been going well. Until recently. My tree has been losing leaves at a quick rate and the leaves are a dark green. Kept indoors and I haven't changed watering or sunlight. Need a little help
Email us a photo to office@bonsai.co.uk so we can see it
The question is, the tree grows in the green house, but how will it respond in an apartment or a normal home with kids, pets, etc! In a green house they are among their family. In apartments or villas they are alone . just watering won't get the tree be like this. I'm 100℅ sure that the tree went to the owner and the owner would've faced some challenges. How is the tree now?
Carmona mikro??
Nope, Ulmus parvifolia
You're the man in my eyes, but for my taste that pointy apex would need to come off and a nice rounded one developed. Not a fan of pointy deciduous.
It’s now filled out and is more rounded
And some mere Mortals ask this God " if the tree will be all right " ? 🤡🤣
Tree is great, in fact, it has just been dropped off at my studio for another trim !!
I love Chinese elms, I just wish people would stop styling them like all the imported mass produced Chinese elms.
I always feel like chinese elms are forced to be styled in a way that doesnt fit elms. Elms grow in giant broom styles with 7 or 8 trunks coming from a central trunk making up like a 4th the height. Like how the suckers are growing on this one.