bonsaiTALK Home Page  

Go Back   bonsaiTALK Community > Best of bonsaiTALK > Articles
User Name
Password
Register FAQ Members List Calendar Mark Forums Read
Forum Gallery Weather Journals Links Webring Wiki NEW:Shop
Articles Opinion T.O.D. NEW:Radio Contests Humor NEW: Auctions! Donate


Reply
 
Article Tools Display Modes
  #11  
by Graydon on 4-Aug-2006
Fantastic article - not to mention great photos.

Well all of them except that one of some guy holding a root ball and looking into the camera lens - that one looks kind of awkward

Thnaks for taking the time to do this. It will be of much help to many people in the future.
Reply With Quote
  #12  
by Aaron_K on 4-Aug-2006
Great work Chris and thankyou for taking the time to document and produce an extremely useful article.

All the best,

Aaron
Reply With Quote
  #13  
by krushon on 28-Aug-2006
Chris, thanks for so detailed description of repotting. I find this article most useful with many great photos and interesting hints. Keep up great work
Reply With Quote
  #14  
by Skylark on 7-Sep-2006
Great article! Would you happen to have a printable version of this article that we could download? I would like to print it out and keep it as a reference...

Thanks again for the great information.
Reply With Quote
  #15  
by bonsaikc on 8-Sep-2006
Well, now I remember why my earlier pages were all thumbnailed! Since I am on dial-up at home, it takes a long time for my page to load! I may have to break it into several pages.

You can find the whole article at http://www.bonsaikc.com/repotting_established.htm . It's a large page, so let it load. It prints out to about 18 pages.
Reply With Quote
  #16  
by jeremy_norbury on 17-Apr-2007
Great article Chris

I just wanted to clarify something about the wiring which wasn't clear to me. Let me see if I can describe what I think you are doing:

- You have wire entering the pot at 4 corners
- Take wire from left corner over root in left corner and bend toward the right corner root.
- twist this piece with the wire in the right corner over the root in the right corner.
- rotate tree clockwise 1/4 so the twisted wire is now on the left.
- repeat until all corners are done.

Is this correct?

A little diagram in your article would be nice...
Reply With Quote
  #17  
by bonsaikc on 26-Apr-2007
I think you are understanding correctly to a point. The result when you get to the end is 4 wires more or less parallel to the sides of the pot. On the last leg, you probably won't have a last end, so make one by twisting a length of wire around that first wire and use that tail and the last wire to cinch up the whole harness. It's important that this tie be located directly over the portion of the nebari with the most upward force, in other words, opposite any tendency to tip over.
Reply With Quote
  #18  
by jeremy_norbury on 26-Apr-2007
Quote:
Originally Posted by bonsaikc
I think you are understanding correctly to a point. The result when you get to the end is 4 wires more or less parallel to the sides of the pot. On the last leg, you probably won't have a last end, so make one by twisting a length of wire around that first wire and use that tail and the last wire to cinch up the whole harness. It's important that this tie be located directly over the portion of the nebari with the most upward force, in other words, opposite any tendency to tip over.


Ok - I get the wiring layout but I don't know why you aim to finish in the corner where the tree is most likely to lift.

Why would the final twist be any more secure than the rest?

If anything I would have assumed you START in the corner where the tree wants to lift out.
Reply With Quote
  #20  
by bonsaikc on 8-Nov-2007
Sorry it took me so long to respond to your last point, Jeremy. The important part here is that we are not ending in a corner. We are ending on the middle of the left side, where the most force will be lifting. When I make a tail to tie to my first wire, then twist that with the leading end, I am making the strongest connection yet. We are building a kind of basket around the nebari, and as I pull, then twist (never pull and twist at the same time!), I am cinching everything up tighter but giving the most hold over this part of the nebari. I hope that helps.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Article Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
GSBF-North Bonsai Pin Collection TreeBay General 9 15-Feb-2006 12:31 PM
CLOSED: Rustic Bonsai FredL General 121 10-Jun-2005 02:43 PM
Link-a-dink-a-doo pootsie General 26 12-Apr-2005 01:29 PM
Bonsai Design - Philosophy Emperor Fish bonsaiQUOTES 1 6-Feb-2005 09:59 AM


All times are GMT -3. The time now is 04:19 PM.


Powered by vBulletin v3.6.5
Copyright ©2000-2007, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.0.0 RC8