I love seeing new videos from you. You’re easily my favorite content creator for bonsai on this platform. Your content is informational without being haughty and austere while being professional and digestible. Keep up the good work man. I wish there were more creators like you on the east coast but until that happens I’ll happily watch everything you make and have made.
Great video, I currently use micro life organic pellets (6-2-3) and/or superfly bonsai pellets (5-7-4). Work great for me in central Texas. Also occasionally use 5-1-1 fish emulsion as well as concentrated seaweed extract.
I save the glass spice jars with the plastic sprinkler tops to be refilled with the organic feed. Makes it easy to treat the trees by just sprinkling around the roots as required.
Are these fertilizers more for mature trees? I am using MG for my young starters and cuttings but just acquired my first few mature bonsai . (Juniper, jade & ficus) just wondering if the MG would work fine or if it is better to switch to one of these organic fertilizers .?
Generally MG works fine for mature trees - but organics can be equally good or better in some circumstances. If you're getting good results with MG then stick with it. You could add organics on top if you want more steady strong growth.
Nice video!! Have you ever done your own fertilizer? Is there any advantage doing my own and how can i know how much NPK im putting to the plant doing this?
Indeed! Many people are suggesting coffee waste + banana peel + eggs shells (all dried and grounded) for gardening, but other are saying that they don’t provide enough nutrients to bonsais…
So, there is more like guessing. Maybe thats the problem when a discussion of fertilizing a bonsai with a DIY method is applied, we cannnot meassure the succes of the process!!
Great knowledge drop, brother. I sure appreciate it. This helped fill in a lot if holes for me. Why keep it in a pile? This part confuses me. Seems like spreading it out would benefit the tree. But obviously there is more to it than I’m fathoming here.
Generally, concentrating the fertilizer in piles (you can put multiple piles on) allows for more consistent breakdown (larger mass of fertilizer stays moist longer) and fewer problems with air and water penetration.
I've seen both done, and generally, concentrating the fertilizer in piles (you can put multiple piles on) allows for more consistent breakdown (larger mass of fertilizer stays moist longer) and fewer problems with air and water penetration.
Don't shoot me but the long branch @0:31 looks out of place, I would cut it off and bring the other lower branches down to create a more aged looking tree, also could you not mix the powder fertiliser with the top soil you have replaced. Look forward to your thoughts?
No doubt, a largely unstyled tree that the owner has been growing. It could use a bit more than just one branch edited! You can mix powdered fertilizer into soil, but it will then immediately basically undo what you did by scraping the soil off. Air penetration is what you are trying to maintain, hence the piles on top. But see what works for you!
This is an older video, and you might not even see this, but I just started using biogold and I noticed some mold on a piece that had been in the soil. Normal or abnormal?
does putting the organic fertilizer in tea bags affect negatively the breakdown or maximum release effect of the fertilizer? I've been placing my powdered fert in tea bags as I've seen others do that as well, but curious if it matters. Here in houston we have one called micro life and it is pretty awesome.
Great question - and I believe the answer is yes, although this is observational and I don't have any firm evidence. What we see here is that when in a tea bag, the fertilizer and the bag do not decompose as readily because they remain too dry on the surface. I've tried adding sphagnum inside the bags, filling them fuller, pinning them to the surface with a toothpick and a few other things, but the dryness of our climate in summer I think makes this method problematic. I will be doing a video specifically on tea bags in the coming weeks also.
@@Bonsaify awesome! Thank you. I don’t want to waste my fertilizer so would be nice to know and just skip tea bags if so, although here our climate is like 80% humidity almost all year long so idk if that would help it decomposes better in the tea bag. Looking forward to the video! Thanks again.
I'm neither an advocate of nor an opponent of moss on bonsai surfaces. In the case of a juniper it has little impact as the bark peels. On a pine or corkbark elm I would not allow it to creep up the trunk. In any case, I think you're right!
Encontré los videos por casualidad y me han parecido muy interesantes y didácticos, aunque aveces el traductor no funciona muy bien se entiende, gracias y un saludo desde Duitama Colombia, y muchas gracias, y que Dios le bendiga.
If I use 50 grams of a 5-3-4, that will give me 2.5 grams N, 1.5 grams of P, and 2 grams of K. How do I know how many grams of each I need for my bonsai?
Trees couldn't care less whether you use "organic" or "synthetic" fertilizer. What you should be looking at is a balanced fertilizer that contains all the micronutrients that a tree needs. Personally I use Jack's fertilizer. I've also used Miracle-Gro and Dyna-Gro.
Actually, we did a separate video around the same time on liquids - but in short, I think both types of fertilizer are useful, and I use both myself on bonsai (but minimal organic on nursery stock due to costs and residue problems.)
I've had problems with opossums digging in my pots looking for fish after using fish emulsion, and rodents eating my tea bags full of other organics. Theres a local company here called gro-power that makes an organic fertilizer that is supposed to not attract animals, I havent tried it yet though.
@@Bonsaify I’m going with neem meal added to the organic fertilizer. It’s supposed repel bugs and rodents. I’ll try it this spring and report on it by summer
You can do it any way you want - piles make it more apparent that things are either breaking down normally or not. Mixing with the soil causes a bit more work later, which is why some people use tea bags. However, your local climate may or may not make tea bags a good option (dry climates prevent the fertilizer from decomposing sometimes.)
Biodynamic was a term I heard re:wine production a few years ago but it doesn't seem to have caught on. Not only this, but "Organic Chemistry" is almost an oxymoron, even though all medical students take it in college. In fact almost all pesticides are the type of molecules studied in Organic Chemistry. 😂