Lesson From A Natal Plum Bonsai
Author: bonsaificus | Filed under: Bonsai Care, Natal Plum Bonsai | Tags: Bonsai Care, bonsai watering, Natal Plum Bonsai | 1 Comment »
One thing I’ve learned to be very careful about as I take care of my ficus bonsai is watering too soon before the soil has dried out sufficiently. I learned this lesson the hard way recently with a natal plum bonsai.
I bought a a natal plum for my mom for Mother’s Day because she has an amazing skill with plants but she had never got into bonsai. What I didn’t take into account was the very limited amount of sunlight that my mom’s house received. She has no western facing windows large enough to accomodate a bonsai tree, so she put it in front of a big eastern facing window. I told her to water it about as much as I watered my ficus bonsai, not thinking that her sunlight conditions were not equal to mine. So maybe it’s kind of my fault.
The leaves on the plum started to yellow so I became worried and took the tree home to my place where it would get enough sunlight. I think it must have been too late by that point because I started watering it a little more because it was getting more sunlight. The leaves slowly dried out and eventually the tree died.
My conclusion is that first, I plated it in a pot that was too tall and didn’t drain well enough. I don’t think the soil every fully dried out between watering. Or at least enough to warrant another watering. I looked at the roots after I had given up the plant and saw that all of them had rotted out. That would explain why they weren’t getting any nutrients to the leaves.
It was a disappointing experience, but I learned to be more careful with my trees. I really liked the natal plum bonsai and I plan on getting another one in the future. But I’ll plant it shallow and water wisely.
Tags: bonsai, natal plum bonsai, bonsai care
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Hi
Sorry i did not get your name on the site sure is here somewhere.
Anyway a college of mine heard that i grow bonsai and asked me to have a look at his ficus. He brought the tree to work and when i saw it i knew it had died but was not sure of what.
As you mentioned in the artical above i started knocking out the reasons by asking him a few questions.
I found that he had the tree for 11 years and it has never been repoted!!!!!!!
He did feed the tree though i think that is what kept it going.
The roots was so rotted that the bark around them just peeled off.
Its kind of sad if the salesman just told him how to look after it it would still be alive.
My point is that sometimes the trees are just sold for the sake of selling them.
Your site is cool and i will keep on checking it.
One question where are you from?
Kind Regards
Retief Jansen