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Old 14-07-2003, 11:09 PM
Kitsune Miko
 
Posts: n/a
Default [IBC] Repotting Buttonwood

OK, I stand corrected on buttonwoods in Ohio. But
there is another saying QTIP. Quit taking it
personally.

It was actually a retorical question. You must admit
that many problems in this forum are in part due to
doing too many things to a tree at one time.

My other pet theory is that bonsai commit harikari if
taken to more than two masters. The more masters that
touch the tree in a year, the better the chances of
demise. Folks, trees just can't think that fast.

Kitsune Miko
--- Steve Parr wrote:
The reason for messing with them right away is that
now is the proper repotting
time for tropicals in SW Ohio.
I was told by several local folks that now is the
perfect time, nights in the
70? F range, days in the upper 80? range.
There was already new growth on the plant. It sat
for almost two weeks in its
present spot before I worked on it.

I would never root prune a plant that I didn't think
could take it.

This particular buttonwood was in a 10" diameter
plastic pot with a depth of
about 10". The soil it was in looked like about what
the "Miracle-Gro" potting
mix my annuals are (petunias, impatiens, marigolds,
verbena; all from seed)
looks like at the end of the summer. It is now in a
drum pot, 12" diameter and
5" deep. There were no roots cut greater than a
"Dum-Dum" lollipop stick
(1/8"). The reason for the one-sided rootage, was
the elongated stump that was
buried. I hope to encourage new roots on the other
side before the next repot.

Steve Parr - Cincinnati, Ohio -
USDA Zone 6
"Now who's respon... I say who's responsible for
this unwarranted attack on my
person"
Foghorn Leghorn


That said, I have more to say. Why do people

bring
home new plants and mess with them right away?

The
plant may be stressed by the move. You don't know

how
it will react to where you place the plant. So

how do
you know which thing affected the plant the most?


snipped

--- Steve Parr wrote:
I recently picked up my first buttonwood at the

MABA
convention in Cincinnati
earlier this month. This past weekend I repotted

it
into a large training pot
from a plastic flowerpot. The new mix consisted

of
probably 3 parts pine bark,
2 parts 1/8" haydite, 1 parts 1/8" grit, 1 part

coir
(a byproduct of coconut
production), and a couple of handfuls of milled
sphagnum peat (used for seed
starting, not the dry brown stuff) a different

mix
from what I normally use.

The tips of the branches seem to almost wilting,

not
quite though, just limp.
The leaves are still upright in respect to the

stem,
but the stem droops

Is it normal for buttonwood to resent repotting

and
medium root pruning? By
medium, I mean removal of maybe 1/3 to 3/8 of

the
root ball (there is still a
good size root ball of fine feeder roots, a bit

one
sided, but still quite
reasonably sized).



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************************************************** ******************************
++++Sponsored, in part, by Mike Page ++++
************************************************** ******************************
-- The IBC HOME PAGE & FAQ:
http://www.internetbonsaiclub.org/ --
+++++ Questions? Help? e-mail +++++