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sick juniper

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Old 28-Jun-2002   #1
Katrina44
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sick juniper

I recently repotted and (my first cascading attempt) styled this juniper. p nana.

The top branch is dying which is hard to see in this photo. But the foliage is brown and hard. The other branches appear to be doing fine. They did initially have some brown tips but this seems to have subsided and look better.

I may have stressed it by keeping it in too much sun. It was only partial not full. I guess it should have been in the shade. It is now.

I have not over watered it. I use the chopstick method, but maybe I should have been misting? I started that but maybe too late.

Do you think it will come back? Or should I just chop it?

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Old 28-Jun-2002   #2
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Re: sick juniper

Brown tips may be a result of cutting the foliage. Any time the scale foliage is crushed or cut, the tips will brown back to the next node (growth point).

You can help avoid this by cutting back removing individual twigs and branches rather than cutting through juniper foliage.

Bonsai styles are defined by the line of the trunk. It's generally best to have a single dominant line in a composition. There can be counterpoints and accents like deadwood, but when there are opposing lines, the composition an become confused.

Your cascade has a mix of elements that make it a bit confused as to whether it is a windswept or cascade style tree.

The long cascading branch suggest that it is a cascade, however the line of the trunk and the parallel, one-sided branching are strong indicators of the windswept style.

I personally think this tree would make a natural windswept*** Getting it into a cascade form could be done, but it would look contrived. John Naka's Bonsai Techniques #1 is a good reference point for a firm grasp of the fundamental styles. You'll find a blurb in the Books section on this forum, also there is a new bonsai STYLES tutorial that I am completing and expect to post in 1-2 weeks, depending on some other commitments.

***take a look over at ***GALLERY*** and type in WINDSWEPT there and you'll see what I mean.

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