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Bonsai Trees, How To Bonsai By Inder Walia Bonsai
- Introduction To the Living Art
Say 'art' and most will think of
painting or sculpture. There is a kind of sculpture, though, that takes as
its raw material not stone or wood but a living tree. That is the art of
bonsai. From the Japanese word for
'tree in a tray', Bonsai is the art and product of shaping trees by careful
pruning to produce a miniature tree or bush. Not produced from genetic
dwarfs, bonsai are the result of years of patient shaping of ordinary species
by master artists. Because
they are grown and shaped in a small pot, but are produced from ordinary
species - pine, maple and many others - extreme care is required to keep the
delicate plants healthy. Soil
type and temperature must be just so - conditions that are only within the
artist's control within a certain range. Pruning techniques take years to
master and are only possible to a certain kind of temperament. Potting and
re-potting practices must be learned and they are many and varied. Watering
alone is a complex science for these small trees and bushes. Too much and the
bonsai will become water-logged and develop fungi and root rot. Too little
and the soil quickly becomes dry and leaves wilt and the tree dies. Soil
and potting practices overlap with watering needs since drainage is critical.
Pruning habits interact with shaping techniques, which in turn are affected
by soil maintenance and watering practices. Bonsai
are among the most difficult products of art to create as all these elements
and many more have to be carried out to near perfection merely for the plant
to survive. Add to that complexity the goal of creating pleasing shapes,
styles and colors for both plant and pot and you have a high art. On
top of the inherent horticultural difficulty of learning and mastering a
dozen sub-sciences, there is the need to master the artistic vision and
skills to produce any of several basic or advanced styles. There
are five basic styles alone: formal upright, informal upright, slanting,
cascade and semi-cascade. From that base branch out a dozen advanced types,
including the literati and other difficult forms. An
art of that kind is not mastered in a month. Craftsmen
labor for years to produce a single tree, which may last a hundred years or
longer. The trees are then often passed down from generation to generation,
each successive artist adding his or her own distinctive style. As the tree
is lovingly molded according to the personal aesthetic of each caretaker,
past efforts are venerated and learned from. Years
of training and experience are required to become a skilled bonsai grower.
Ordinary horticulture is by itself a difficult craft. But to produce a
miniature tree from ordinary species takes a lifetime of patience and
learning. The
results are widely regarded as well-worth the effort, though. Bonsai are
admired the world over for their uniqueness, their longevity, variety and
beauty and for the skill that goes to produce them. In an
age when brilliant technology can mass produce global cell phones and
self-diagnosing automobiles, these individually designed and hand crafted,
miniature works of art continue to inspire awe and admiration. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Copyright
by Inder Walia Read more articles on http://www.bonsaitreescare.com |
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