When To Wire Juniper Bonsai
To understand why we wire bonsai it is important to understand what bonsai is.
When to wire juniper bonsai. Bonsai wire is used to start training bonsai maintain an existing one and to change older bonsai as well. As the branch grows it will thicken and eventually begin to bite into the bark. Then with fingers on the wire only bend slowly to achieve a new position. It is beneficial and standard basic practice to wire each branch or pad in a fanned out hand shaped manner.
By doing so each branch will be better and more fully exposed to sunlight. This also makes them perfect for people who do a lot of traveling and may need to go a few extra days between watering. Bending and shaping the branches of a bonsai wiring is a crucial technique to train and style bonsai trees. Juniper bonsai can survive an extra day or two if you forget to water them.
The length of time the wire must stay on the tree before the branch sets will vary from tree to tree and variety to variety. When wiring shimpaku particularly in the early developmental stages of the tree as a bonsai. Once the excess foliage has been removed thinned out from the branches of a juniper bonsai the structure of the tree can be seen clearly and it is possible to coil wire around the branches in order that they can then be repositioned. Most bonsai can be repotted during the winter but the best period for this is the weeks immediately prior to the early spring revival when you judge that there is no longer a danger of intense cold that could damage the roots.
It will take a few months before the branches are set in their new shape. Dramatically twisted shapes are very popular and correspond with the natural shapes that used to grow in the japanese mountains in former times. This allows people with the most hectic schedules to own a bonsai that produces impressive bark under a beautiful canopy. Junipers which are produced for bonsai purposes are already wired quite heavily in most cases when they are still very young.
The wire should than be removed. The two most commonly used types are copper and aluminum. The wire is wrapped on the branch or trunk the way it is currently growing.