Mallsai excercise 2. - Serissa
- Felidae
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Ugly as it should be..
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You can see in the middle a coarse, rotten root just broken out, and all of the look unproportionate.
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That side looks a slight better.
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- Felidae
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Hammer the tool for the job..
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The root system on the form of the bonsai pot, but all wrong direction.
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I just put a stone under the roots to encourage some lateral growth. In the same time the roots also get arranged towards a better direction. I couldn’t cut down the weird one, cause too much feeder roots on it.
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- Felidae
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I planned to keep in that training pot maybe 3 years to get better roots.
Soil:
2 p Seramis
1 p Pumice
3 p Red scoria (0,5-2mm)
1 p Rhododendron mix (for acidity)
1 p Orchid bark
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- Madartej21
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- Clicio
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Madartej21 wrote: I would have potted with a technique to help it reach neagari style. I think it could fit the style pretty well
Yes, I agree.
Neagari suits it!
On the other hand... I don't like Serissas.
Uninteresting, smallish, fickle and boring.
Below a Brazilian example of a Serissa neagari:
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- Auk
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Uninteresting, smallish, fickle and boring.
[/quote]
And they are touchy. Very touchy roots, touchy to movement, touchy to incorrect watering, and even touchy when you look at them the wrong way. They just drop their leaves and fall over.
Still.. for the price of a hamburger I wouldn't hesitate (if it's a McDonalds plain hamburger

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- Auk
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Felidae wrote: Looks much better, isn’t it?
Yes. It does look better this way

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- Mimo
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I wouldn?t bother making a larger bonsai from this material, but it could be a nice shohin one day.
And have a guess what I would do with it?
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- Felidae
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Clicio wrote:
Madartej21 wrote: I would have potted with a technique to help it reach neagari style. I think it could fit the style pretty well
Yes, I agree.
Neagari suits it!
Guys, I understand, but it was sooo hellish ugly, specially with the missing root, that I couldn’t stand for. It was two more on the shelf. Next week I’ll pick up one more, and do Neagari, oki?
Ok, ok got it! I’ll never gift a Serissa for you..On the other hand... I don't like Serissas.
Uninteresting, smallish....

Auk wrote:
And they are touchy. Very touchy roots, touchy to movement, touchy to incorrect watering, and even touchy when you look at them the wrong way. They just drop their leaves and fall over.
Still.. for the price of a hamburger I wouldn't hesitate (if it's a McDonalds plain hamburger)
I was scared with the other (Swiss one) also, but it didn’t dropped more than 3-5 leaves when I moved. When I turned back into the same position according to the sun how it was inside, it stopped shedding. Looks like that species “tell” immediately if something not right and I can corrigate, like yellow leaves for too much water, etc... Well we’ll see in 2 years if they still kicking.
Thanks, I have hope for thatAuk wrote: Yes. It does look better this way

Thanks Mimo, I’ll try to aim something similarMimo wrote: I like the front and movement on the last pic Felidae posted.
I wouldn?t bother making a larger bonsai from this material, but it could be a nice shohin one day.
And have a guess what I would do with it?

Mimo wrote: and regarding roots - I wouldn?t expect any interesting forming while buried like that - wouldn?t hesitate to airlayer at the top of current soil level as soon as the tree recovers from repotting and starts to grow significantly.
Uhh.. Layering is not a bad idea! Maybe a torque could be enough also. I’ll thinking.
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