Thursday, November 24, 2011

Bonsai Tree - Bonsai Tree Guide


!±8± Bonsai Tree - Bonsai Tree Guide

To jumpstart your bonsai horticultural hobby, you first need to select the right kind of bonsai tree that will yield to clipping, pruning and training of branches and roots and wiring to give rise to the shape and design of a plant species you had envisaged.

While selecting a bonsai tree you have to keep in mind various factors like climate, temperature, your lifestyle, care and maintenance, your choice and preference, congruity with the décor in your home etc.

There are indoor bonsai trees and out door bonsai trees. For the former category choices are a bit limited. If you lead a busy lifestyle and are strapped for time and you feel that you won't be able to devote much time or labor behind the care and maintenance of your bonsai, you should opt for low maintenance and hassle free bonsai tree that is hardy and requires minimal care.

Some people have a fascination for exotic bonsai tree species sourced from far off lands, which not only require optimum care, but also find it difficult to adapt to the foreign climate. Adaptability is a factor that you should always keep in mind while selecting a bonsai tree, because surely you don't want your bonsai species to perish after spending close to a fortune on its transit and care.

For e.g. Tropical trees will find it difficult to adapt in a Canadian or Norwegian or Russian winter. Most horticultural experts will recommend indigenous native plants which don't require acclimatization, adapt easily to surroundings, are hassle free and require little care. They are ideal for busy executives on the move.

What I am trying to hammer at is - don't just fall for fancy looks or the exotic appeal. It is a common mistake which costs people dear. Following is a list of bonsai tree that may be ideal for you. Choose whichever one you like.

Bonsai tree

Zelkova serrata
Wisteria
Weigela
Grape vines
Elms
Hemlocks
Limes
Thymes
Yews
Swamp cypress
Tamarix
Lilacs
Spiraea
Mountain ash
Umbrella tree
Tree of a thousand stars
Willows
Chinese bird plum
Black locust or false acacia
Rhododendrons
Oaks
Azaleas
Firethorns
Pomegranate
Varieties of plum, cherries, black thorn
Potentilla
Cinquefoil
Podocarpus
Pines
Pieris
Spruce
Pemphis
Ironwood
Philippine bantigue
Virginia creepers
Boston ivy
Olive
Heavenly or sacred bamboo
Flowering crab apples
Star magnolia
Honeysuckle shrub
Sweet gum
Privets
Larches
Myrtles
Junipers
Jasmines
Holly
Ivy
English ivy
Honey locust
Maidenhair tree
Fuchsia
Ash
Forsythia
Figs
Beech
Spindle trees
Poinsettia
Enkianthus
Eleagnus
Deutzia
Daphne
Common quince
Chinese quince
Cedars
Hawthorn
Jade
Cotoneaster
Smoke tree
Hazels
Winter hazel
Dogwood
Cypress
Judas tree
Hackberry
Cedars
Hornbeams
Fukien tea
Camellia
Box wood
Bougainvillea
Birch
Barberry
Horse chestnut
Japanese maple
Maples
Firs

These are the common names of these bonsai trees, you can also choose from their different sub varieties.


Bonsai Tree - Bonsai Tree Guide

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