home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!rpi!usenet.coe.montana.edu!news.u.washington.edu!stein.u.washington.edu!bulwinkl
- From: bulwinkl@stein.u.washington.edu (In Cognito)
- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Subject: Bonsai, and germinating tropicals
- Date: 28 Jan 1993 08:29:53 GMT
- Organization: University of Washington, Seattle
- Lines: 42
- Message-ID: <1k85i1INNlah@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: stein.u.washington.edu
- Summary: When to train bonsai, and germinating macademias
- Keywords: Bonsai, tropicals, macademias
-
- Here in Seattle it was 19 degrees at 7:30am a few weeks ago.
- But now it's 45oF in the morning, and my oak seedling (in a
- cool room indoors) has put on a few new leaves.
-
- I've never trained bonsai before, but understand I should do
- it at the end of the winter. We just got this freak early
- spring, and now I don't know but that it might not stay.
- Haven't lived in Seattle long enough to know if it'll freeze
- again.
-
- Do I go ahead and train the bonsai seedlings as soon as
- possible? Will it hurt the oak if I trim off the twigs with
- the new leaves/ trim new root growth? Should I put the
- seedlings back outside now, and take them in if it freezes
- again? These seedlings are California natives; so used to
- slightly warmer weather. (Two oaks and madrone are indoors.
- A spruce and maple - from washington - are outdoors.)
- Perhaps I should leave them outside a few days before
- training them?
-
- Second question: On impulse I bought a few macademias that
- were sold as seeds. They are supposed to be kept in 80 degree
- water to germinate. I kept the bowl of spagnum and water
- warm by putting it inside a cupboard, covering it with a
- white plastic bag and shining a light on it. Used a thermometer
- to regulate the temperature. Only put one of the seeds in,
- and that seed didn't sprout in the 3+ months I kept it in the
- warm water. Any advice to increase my chances for the other
- two seeds? BTW, I started the seed in mid-August.
-
- Bonus question: I have a tiny Mexi-Bell Pepper seedling that
- hasn't grown at all in months. Will it start to grow when
- the days get longer (it's 65 degrees where I keep it now),
- or will it end up staying stunted and just croak without
- doing anything interesting? I'm not used to trying to grow
- tropicals indoors in a cold winter climate, but I have a
- couple plants (azalea, xmas cactus) that have been blooming
- like crazy for months. (Also used to be able to grow orchids
- and even get them to bloom sometimes. ;-)
-
- Thanks fellow plant fans!
-
-