P
PHRAG
Guest
I am just getting started in this wonderful hobby. I have been in love with Japanese orchids and art for a while now, and the time is right for me to start learning this art form. The ability to combine my love of plants and art into one hobby is too attractive to resist.
Here are some starter trees I purchased. These have been trained, so they aren't just raw nursery stock, but they haven't been refined to the point of being finished. Not that you can finish a bonsai. I think I have a pretty good start with these trees if I can keep them alive.
I joined a local bonsai society, and I am hoping to find a mentor there who can teach me a few hands-on skills. I don't even have any tools yet! So many hobbies, so much to buy.
These are the trees. From left to right they measure roughly 9", 4" and 8" tall not counting the pots. These are small bonsai trees.
This one is an American Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis). It will develop small berries.
This is a Serissa tree (Serrissa foetida). It is nicknamed the Tree of a Thousand Stars because of the tiny, star shaped blooms that cover it when it blooms.
This is a twin trunk, Star Jasmine tree (Trachelospermum jasminoides). It's not a real jasmine, but will bloom with small off-white pinwheel shaped flowers.
Here are some starter trees I purchased. These have been trained, so they aren't just raw nursery stock, but they haven't been refined to the point of being finished. Not that you can finish a bonsai. I think I have a pretty good start with these trees if I can keep them alive.
I joined a local bonsai society, and I am hoping to find a mentor there who can teach me a few hands-on skills. I don't even have any tools yet! So many hobbies, so much to buy.

These are the trees. From left to right they measure roughly 9", 4" and 8" tall not counting the pots. These are small bonsai trees.

This one is an American Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis). It will develop small berries.

This is a Serissa tree (Serrissa foetida). It is nicknamed the Tree of a Thousand Stars because of the tiny, star shaped blooms that cover it when it blooms.

This is a twin trunk, Star Jasmine tree (Trachelospermum jasminoides). It's not a real jasmine, but will bloom with small off-white pinwheel shaped flowers.