Author Archives: bonsaihu

Willow Leaf ficus after 20 years

I started working on this tree nearly 20 years ago. It was a large Ficus salicaria, Willow leaf ficus, purchased from a Florida nursery and selected by my friend and bonsai artist Joe Samuels. Joe passed away some years back and was a great help to me in advancing my bonsai knowledge. The tree was a huge piece about 30 inches tall and with little or no low or inside foliage. I grew it for several years and decided that to become a good bonsai it would need to be reduced in size to bring the focal point back to the heavy trunk and large aerial roots coming from the trunk.

I reduced it pretty drastically and grew it on for about 4 more years when I finally came to the conclusion that I had not reduced it enough and I chopped it back even more. This slow decision making lost me 5 years or more in developing its final design. In the image below you can see the tree pretty much as it looked 19 years back and on the right is how it looks now. It is much smaller but still it is in a 20″ pot.

Ficus salicaria on the left about 2001 and on the right in 2020

My new Ficus book

It is getting close to Christmas and the holidays. If you have a bonsai friend or Ficus lover that needs a great book please consider buying a copy of my new book, The World of Ficus Bonsai. You might even want to buy one for yourself.

I will sign your copy and even add a custom note in the book if you desire. You can order a soft cover copy by going to PayPal and sending $35 to bonsaihunk@hotmail.com

This is available only in the USA. Please include your e-mail, name, mailing address and your wish for a custom note or not. The book will be mailed via USPS Media Mail and should get to you before Christmas. Thanks.

Fusion

Many of us do not have easy access to larger materials and must use small plants or cuttings to develop their bonsai. One way to utilize smaller material is to cultivate cuttings from a desirable plant. In this case it is a Ficus concinna with lovely new foliage that is quite red in color. I took multiple cuttings from the mother tree and rooted them. You can see the rooted cuttings in the first photo. Each is about 2-3 feet tall and in separate growing containers.

One after another is brought as close together as possible by removing interfering branches and roots. They are then held with plastic cable ties or any other suitable non-stretching material to secure the trees tightly together and then planted into a large growing container. These trees will be allowed wild growth with as little trimming as possible. Over time the ties will begin to press into the bark and then they can be removed and replaced as needed until the fusion is complete.

Over time branches are selected that grow out of the bundle are used in the final design of the bonsai. The end result is a larger tree than I could have developed in the same number of years in my plant room. If I lived in a tropical area I could have simply planted a tree in the ground and grown it for 5 years to get a thick trunk and then worked on developing the branch structure.

Rooted cuttings in small growing containers will be fused
Cuttings are brought tightly together with plastic cable ties
Plants are placed into a large growing container