A friend has gone off to china for six weeks leaving us to look after one his most prized possessions - his s0dding bonsai tree!
The only instructions we were given were that (a) it didn't matter too much where it was stood and (b) it should be watered every day - the equivalent of a small wine glass.
Halfway through his trip and the thing is moulting leaves like effing confetti!
If it carries on like this there will hardly be a leaf left on it.
Any ideas or suggestions?
Comments
Oh blimey. I'm surprised he didn't give you more detailed instructions because in my (limited and not too clever) experience, they can be quite delicate little things. Maybe the conditions he keeps it in happen to be ideal without him realising?
I had a Chinese Elm years ago and IIRC there were two things it particularly liked apart from regular watering: (a) a fair amount of natural light, and (b) a regular room temperature. Unfortunately the house I was living in at the time didn't have central heating and I'm prety sure this is what killed it off. Oh yes and apart from water I'm pretty sure there was some proper bonsai plant food to feed it. I would've thought this might be relevant over a 6 week period.
Anyway, that's the extent of my troubleshooting. I suggest you find yourself a bonsai tree forum!
Thanks PB - it's not standing in a particularly well lit place so we'll move it towards the window
Hadn't thought about a bonsai tree forum but then I guess there are some pretty strange forums about
Agree with PP, to a degree - my Mum bought be a bonsai tree about ten years ago. It died. The replacement died. The third stand in died. Fortunately, they all seem to be sold in the same blue ceramic tub so not too tricky to substiture a live, fresh one for the small, leaf-less twig your friend's bonsai tree is soon to become.
They're like pandas, bonsai trees, destined to die.
I'm going to invest in some superglue
I also had a Bonsai tree, it shed all it's leaves and then died abruptly I'd kept it alive for 18 months, did nothing different and it just died.
I'd look for a bonsai tree forum, think I checked one of these the first time the tree had problems (red spider mites)
Yeah! it took at least 10 years to kill mine!! I forgot to water it for about 10 years. Kind of put it in a windowsill that got full sunlight and it was upstairs so never really thought about it much. 8 years without water is ok. i managed to revive that one but 10 years is not good especially if you only ever wateredit about 3 times a year for the previous 10 years you had it.
I like bonsai trees but I have never even been tempted to buy one. I know the leaves will fall off within a week. Same goes for other house plants. I have one that has grass like leaves. I've had it for a few years now and the leaves stopped being green about 3 months after I bought it. Should throw it away but I'm trying to con myself that it still lives. I'm onto my third cast iron plant (aspidistra), so called because you are not supposed to be able to kill them. I can categorically say that is not true, twice over and could be a third time over now too. I have it outside in the rain to try to get it to grow back. I once watered the pot when the leaves all went brown last time in the vain hope it would recover. It did and I got a few small green leaves come out. I cut out the dead brown ones to allow the green ones to grow unhindered. It came round and grew to a nice plant again. Then I forgot to water it for a while. I am back to the vain attempt to revive it.
If you want me to look after it for your friend give me a shout. PM me!
http://www.bonsaigardener.org/bonsai-tree-types.html
http://forums.bonsaigarden.net/
Good luck ... glass of wine a day sounds a bit much? or is it a giant bonsai?
Take a photo now, so you can a very similar one 1 day before they return ?
There are now more dead b'st@rd leaves scatterd on the b@st@rd floor than there are leaves left on the b@st'd branches!
Double post deleted.
BTW you could have said no and he could have goto someone else. You are doing a favour and trying your best. Hopefully he will understand when he comes back to the bonsai tree in winter. That's a good excuse actually, might work. just say its winter so the tree shed its leaves. I take it the tree is a deciduous one.
Bonsai or not it's soon to become an ex-tree
I also have a 'winter landscape' bonsai guiltily lurking in the shad so am very glad to find I am not the only heartless Bonsai killer out there.
Mind you, the four ex-cacti and the ex-Aloe Vera plant that preceeded it should have told me I was not any good at this plant stuff....