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2012-07-26

Slash pine bonsai : 4 Year Progression

Bonsai Mauritius - Slash pine bonsai : 4 Year Progression

This is a 4 years progression of my pine "bonsai".
It's a Slash Pine [ Pinus Elliottii ], acquired as a sapling back in 2009.

Most pictures of bonsai that stuck in my mind are bonsai of evergreen trees - Pines or Junipers.
After four years "playing" with this pine I am just starting to grasp the basic's basics of pines.
If I had to place a tree in terms of difficulty, pines would be at the top of the list.
It is definitely non a tree variety for a beginner and its needs a methodical approach to get something remotely resembling a bonsai.

Furthermore different varieties of bonsai have different number of needles, and depending on the number of needles your bonsai have [ 2 needles, 3 needles, 5 needles, etc ] you have different approaches to reducing those needles to acceptable length.

Slash pine is not a pine variety traditionally used in creating bonsai.

The most common pine varieties used for creating bonsai are Black pine, White pine, Mugo pine.
I have not been able to find those varieties in nurseries in Mauritius and so I've tried to reproduce Black Pine [ 2 needles ] needle reducing techniques on my Slash Pine [ 2-3 needles ]

One of the main difficulty with the Slash Pine is that it has very long needles.
I did managed to get some reduction to at least 50% [ picture at the end of the article ].
Typical slash pine needle length = 20cms
My current slash pine needle length = 10cm


So here it is :

Oct 2009 - Slash Pine Sapling.
July 2010
Oct 2010 - The tree is growing several candles.
April 2011
Oct 2011 - The picture is too small to see clearly,
but there are several candles on this one. Candles is
the equivalent of new shoots that you see in deciduous
trees.
June 2012
June 2012
June 2012 - Close up of the ramifications

June 2012 - Needle reduction
Top needle is from another Slash Pine [ untrained ]
Bottom needle is from this Slash Pine



Some pine bonsai reference:
Bonsai4me - Info on Pinus Species

1 comment:

  1. Interesting read and I applaud your research. Might I ask how you were able to succeed at shortening the needles?

    ReplyDelete