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Bonsai can be created from nearly any perennial woody-stemmed tree or shrub species [2] which produces true branches and remains small through pot confinement with crown and root pruning. Some species are popular as bonsai material because they have characteristics, such as small leaves or needles, that make them appropriate for the compact ...
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Cut back the leaves and stems in fall and dispose of cutting in the trash, not the compost pile. Spacing plants further apart to encourage good air circulation and keeping the foliage dry when ...
The pruning practices of coppicing and pollarding induce ramification by removing most of a tree's mass above the root. Fruit tree pruning increases the yield of orchards by inducing ramification and thereby creating many vigorous, fruitful branches in the place of a few less-fruitful ones.
With fall upon us and the leaves changing color and falling to the ground, the age-old question arises: Should I rake my leaves?
It places the bonsai at a height that allows the viewer to imagine the bonsai as a full-size tree seen from a distance, siting the bonsai neither so low that the viewer appears to be hovering in the sky above it nor so high that the viewer appears to be looking up at the tree from beneath the ground. Noted bonsai writer Peter Adams recommends ...
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Satsuki azaleas are popular bonsai plants for many reasons. They can take a hard pruning, the flowers vary in color, shape and size, and they take well to pot culture. Azaleas prefer acidic soil. They are basally-dominant plants, unlike other plants used in bonsai which are apically-dominant. [2]