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[IBC] juniper advice needed
I think I wrote several months ago about the juniper "bonsai"
that were donated to our Taoist Tai Chi Center. Both were very sad specimens (though they were nursery plants and not Mallsai). Anyway, I took on the job of rejuvenating these plants -- even though I'm not the best grower of juniper bonsai. ---- understatement. I put them both in the ground for a season. I potted up the J. prostrata (or procumbens) this spring and it immediately went into a funk. I thought I'd lost it -- it turned a sickly olive, mixed with brown and felt limp. I seem to have nursed it back to health, however, there's quite a bit of new growth popping up everywhere and it generally looks and feels healthier. My problem: Much of the new growth is at the end of long spindly, brown twigs, as: ||||#### where is the old brown needle stubs that dried and blew away as it was recovering and #### is the bright new growth way out at the end of that long, skinny twig. My question. If I snip that "branch" half way (or less), can I expect to see more #### show up at the end of the shortened branch? If not, what's the solution to this dilemma? The other juniper is still growing in the ground, but it is one of those horribly ugly bi-color (yellow and green) J. chinensis cultivars and I'm having a very hard time imagining it as a bonsai. Jim Lewis - - Tallahassee, FL - Our life is frittered away by detail . . . . Simplify! Simplify. -- Henry David Thoreau - Walden ************************************************** ****************************** ++++Sponsored, in part, by Evergreen Gardenworks++++ ************************************************** ****************************** -- The IBC HOME PAGE & FAQ: http://www.internetbonsaiclub.org/ -- +++++ Questions? Help? e-mail +++++ |
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