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zelkovafortress 21-02-2009 03:54 PM

Help
 
Hi,

I've just brought a Zelkova bonsai from a local hame base and I have no idea what to do now! I've wanted a bonsai for a long time, and I've brought a general book about them, but it doesn't name my sepcies of bonsai speacifically. I know I've made a small risk by buying a bonsai from a shop, but I wanted to start somewhere. Is anyone able to give me any pointers or information about them?

The greatest of thanks in advance.

[email protected] 23-02-2009 09:42 AM

Help
 
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Bonsaiart.co.uk 02-03-2009 02:22 PM

Help
 
First up... don't panic!!!
I assume you are from the UK? A zelkova belongs outdoors so first of
all make sure that is where it is.
My site a href="http://bonsaiart.co.uk "Bonsai Art/a offfers good
tips so that you can learn about them slowly but for now relax and
wait for spring when the buds will open.

On Feb 21, 3:54*pm, zelkovafortress zelkovafortress.
wrote:
Hi,

I've just brought a Zelkova bonsai from a local hame base and I have no
idea what to do now! I've wanted a bonsai for a long time, and I've
brought a general book about them, but it doesn't name my sepcies of
bonsai speacifically. I know I've made a small risk by buying a bonsai
from a shop, but I wanted to start somewhere. Is anyone able to give me
any pointers or information about them?

The greatest of thanks in advance.

--
zelkovafortress



jenny_adams 02-03-2009 03:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bonsaiart.co.uk (Post 831973)
First up... don't panic!!!
I assume you are from the UK? A zelkova belongs outdoors so first of
all make sure that is where it is.
My site a href="http://bonsaiart.co.uk "Bonsai Art/a offfers good
tips so that you can learn about them slowly but for now relax and
wait for spring when the buds will open.

On Feb 21, 3:54*pm, zelkovafortress zelkovafortress.
wrote:
Hi,

I've just brought a Zelkova bonsai from a local hame base and I have no
idea what to do now! I've wanted a bonsai for a long time, and I've
brought a general book about them, but it doesn't name my sepcies of
bonsai speacifically. I know I've made a small risk by buying a bonsai
from a shop, but I wanted to start somewhere. Is anyone able to give me
any pointers or information about them?

The greatest of thanks in advance.

--
zelkovafortress

There's some great advice here. Thank you!

heidy12 28-01-2011 05:54 AM

hi,....
you are doing good.
keep it up and thanks for sharing

PlantLuberJohn 08-02-2011 10:58 PM

You MUST keep your Bonsai tree's in good condition (presumeing you live in europe) Bonsai tree's (if they meet the right conditions) tend to "sweat", or, more precisely, urinate on themselves. To rectify this, simply smother your plant with honey.

This isn't a joke, i'm being dead serious. I know it sounds strange, but i'm telling the truth.

huluzu 23-02-2011 05:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PlantLuberJohn (Post 912430)
You MUST keep your Bonsai tree's in good condition (presumeing you live in europe) Bonsai tree's (if they meet the right conditions) tend to "sweat", or, more precisely, urinate on themselves. To rectify this, simply smother your plant with honey.

This isn't a joke, i'm being dead serious. I know it sounds strange, but i'm telling the truth.

nice tips all of you.
with the seperation of my boyfriend, i also left his bonsai in our apartment in berlin.
so i've been thinking of buying a new one every once in a while.

think i'll try my luck this year!

saph.sty24 28-02-2011 02:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zelkovafortress (Post 830929)
Hi,

I've just brought a Zelkova bonsai from a local hame base and I have no idea what to do now! I've wanted a bonsai for a long time, and I've brought a general book about them, but it doesn't name my sepcies of bonsai speacifically. I know I've made a small risk by buying a bonsai from a shop, but I wanted to start somewhere. Is anyone able to give me any pointers or information about them?

The greatest of thanks in advance.

it more then likely a chinese elm
my chinese elm was wrongly sold as a zelkova yes they like being out doors just wait till the late frosts are over so put it outside around the end of march. for the time being put it on a window sill that gets sun all day as they love the warmth
they like they roots damp but not wet so free draining soil is a must
and you must also fine spray them in the evening (never in sunlight as this will burn them)as this helps keep them fresh and clean (daily pollution ect)
never stand your plant in water always water your tree from the top of the soil and let it drain, you will also have to feed it once a month in the growing season, and use water at room temp never straight out of the tap
cold water shocks the root system

hope this helps a little

saph

Tomasdeil001 26-03-2011 11:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by (Post 831184)

This is a very useful content for finding your species of bonsai. Hope this was helpful.

aldis 19-12-2011 09:01 AM

when reclearing lines in urban areas.
However when a tree is rounded over as you describe, it
subsequently puts out a mass of wild growth (think trunk chop or
drastic pruning in your bonsai), which soon is back into the
power lines, and is weakly attached to the tree and prone to
breaking off.

Adam Briney 06-05-2012 02:34 PM

Most likely its a Chinese Elm, rather than a Zelkova. As someone else mentions are a quite often incorrectly labelled. If you plan to keep it in the house it wants a bright spot away from radiators and other sources of heat. Kitchen and bathroom windows can be good places...


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