One man's philosophy is another man's bellylaugh.

Jeff Howe

Jeff Howe
Location
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania,
Company
Howe Original Productions
Bio
Jeff Howe is a bonsai enthusiast and harmonica player who has very good reason to believe that the Universe tastes like a cheap buck-fifty melon. He is a product of Walled Lake and a former Poetry Slam Champion of Milwaukee. He once shook hands with Rocky Colavito, opened for Leon Redbone and took a piss next to Mose Allison (no hands were shaken). All things considered, his best single day was July 4th, 1987 when he marched in the Marmarth, North Dakota parade in the morning, discovered a rare dinosaur skull in the afternoon, and then sat in playing harmonica with a drunken cowboy band until way past tomorrow. It's been downhill ever since. Jeff is a misemployed geologist who specializes in interpreting rock outcrops at 70 miles per hour. It's a gift. His daughter loves cows.

Jeff Howe's Links

Best Of...
Stories
Essays
Humor/Irony
Review/Opinion/Commentary
Science
Geology
Teaching
History
Horticulture
Workin' For A Livin'
Other Sites by Jeff Howe
MARCH 31, 2009 10:41AM

On Raising Dawn Redwoods As Bonsai

Rate: 2 Flag

The Dawn Redwood (Metasequoia glyptostroboides, hereafter referred to as “metasequoia”) is a surviving relict of a family of trees that goes back in the fossil record almost to the beginning of the Age of Dinosaurs – well over 200 million years.  By about 40 million years ago, this group of trees was so successful that they enjoyed a world-wide, circumpolar distribution from the arctic to the lower mid-latitudes.  But for reasons not completely understood, but most likely related to changes in world-wide climate, their distribution began to shrink and they were eventually pushed into isolated canyons where they survived in small groups.  By 6 million years ago they had receded from North America and by 2.5 million years ago they appeared to have vanished from the Earth completely.  

 Metasequoias were thought to be extinct until the 1940’s when vague rumors of a mystery ghost tree caused teams of scientists from China and the United States to further investigate a small upland valley in the Szechwan province of China where a single isolated population of Dawn Redwoods was found to exist.  Seeds brought back from that expedition were distributed world-wide to universities, herbaria and research facilities around the world and from those seeds a new world-wide population of metasequoia trees has emerged. 

 I first became intrigued in 1973 when, as an undergraduate at Michigan State University, I listened to a professor in an elective plant pathology course tell the story. He told us that one of those original 1940-era trees was growing on campus, and after class I sought out the tree and sat beneath it for hours, pondering its long journey.  I am still fascinated and have well over 12 dozen of them growing at the Little Big Trees Bonsai Plantation in my yard.  They range in size from tiny cuttings and seedlings that just began sprouting in late March, to one that I planted next to my driveway about 6 years ago and which has rocketed to over two stories tall! 

 Rather than going into an extended history of the tree (which I may do at a later date), I thought I’d relate a few of the things that I’ve learned over the years about growing and styling these marvelous trees as bonsai.

 

Soil

 The biggest problem with metasequoias is that the leaf fronds are so thin and delicate that, if they dry out even once, it will likely kill the tree.  They are very hardy trees but also very unforgiving to desiccation.  Therefore, I have found that I have the best luck growing them in a soil that has been amended with a generous fraction of organic material to hold water.  Bear in  mind however, that the opposite is equally as true.  Metasequoias are native to relatively well-drained, upland soils.  A rich, soupy, organic mix will only promote root-rot.  The key is not letting them dry out. 

 Plant Placement

 Metasequoias grown in the ground can tolerate full sun (again, because they don’t dry out).  Pot-grown trees should be placed beneath a screen, trellis or other diffusing agent to provide a “dappled sun” environment, especially from mid-June to late summer.

 Watering and Feeding

 These trees prefer a constant, moderate level of soil moisture.  Too much water causes their bases to become rotted, mossy and/or salt stained.  Too little water, again, causes them to dry out from the tips in.  I feed them once a week, one-half strength, rotating a variety of feeds, but always including fish emulsion.  Why?  No particular reason, I just get the feeling that my trees react favorably to it. 

 You need to monitor them daily in the heat of the summer.

 Trimming

 I remove each of my trees from the ground or pot each spring a trim the roots back to a fist-sized ball or smaller (depending of course on tree size).  The roots grow back quickly and aggressively.  I also trim the tops aggressively, trying to keep the trees in a compact triangular shape.  This also promotes much denser branching.  Metasequoias naturally assume something of an inverted teardrop or flame shape in nature.  This doesn’t work well with bonsai because the branch lengths become too long and out of proportion.  My trees all have more of a coastal redwood look.  This is, of course, a matter of taste and practicality.

 A neat trick that I’ve learned is too take a two or three inch piece of slate and wire it UNDER the roots, spreading the roots out laterally before repotting each spring.  This splays the roots and forces them outward.  (One of the world’s great abandoned slate deposits lies just across the Susquehanna River from Lancaster in York County, PA.)

 The biggest thing with trimming metasequoias is that the branches grow VERY fast and bud-back is constant along the trunk.  Therefore, whether you like it or not, you have to constantly and aggressively cut off your largest branches lest they quickly become  out of proportion with the tree.  Don’t worry they’ll bud back in profusion. 

 Another thing to consider: when topping your trees… and you must top your trees each year… rather than taking a vertical slice and wiring up a lower branch, try taking a cut above to opposite buds (they bud opposite) and the cutting off the “back” bud, leaving the front one to grow on.  This often leaves less scaring and “herky-jerky” taper.

 Propagation

 Two choices: seeds or cuttings.   Cones should be collected when they fall and can be stored in the refrigerator.  When they begin to open, put them all in a big coffee can with a lid and shake the heck out of them, liberating the seeds.  Then mix the seeds with a rich organic soil like you were baking a cake, spread it out in a shallow bonsai pan and cover with 1/8” to ¼” of very fine gravel.  (The gravel helps keep the surface drier and inhibits fungal growth in the early stages of the new plant.)  I put mine out in the sun about two weeks ago and they’re already sprouting.  Be sure to protect them from freezing weather in the early spring!

 I’ve done a lot of experimentation with taking cuttings and am beginning to settle on the following:  I leave my trees with their previous year’s growth over the winter and then around early March, I trim them to taste.  I put all of the cuttings into water and let them soak a day or two.  I select the best (and of course, “best” is highly subjective… ask me and I’m give you my two cents..) terminal cuttings, dip them in liquid rooting hormone (IBA) if I have it or powdered Root Tone if I don’t, and plant them in mass in a large wooden box in a moist, organic soil.  The box is nice because I can move it from sun to shade and out of the cold.  I just let them go.  You rogue out the ones that are obviously dead and about mid-June plant the survivors in small rooting containers.  I grow them on for one season and then pot them up to a small growth pot the next spring.

This post and my bonsai blog can be found at littlebigtrees@blogspot.com. I also have a web site for other projects at www.howeop.com.  Questions can be addressed to my email at jeff.howe@verizon.net.

 

 

Your tags:

TIP:

Enter the amount, and click "Tip" to submit!
Recipient's email address:
Personal message (optional):

Your email address:

Comments

Type your comment below:
i would love to see pictures. could you correct the blogspot link so that it goes to the site instead of email?

i am going ahead an searching for your site via the blogspot search ability, so hopefully i can tell you how cool your trees are shortly.

thanks for this post! bonsai is nifty.
Thanks for sharing this. My question is: can metasequoia trees be brought inside the house as ornament, like those common indoor bonsai plants? Because growing a metasequoia seems really challenging and tricky. Can it live with minimal amount of sun?
LS:

(I’m going to copy this response to you as a PM, but I assume you’ll be checking back here for it as well.)

Bonsai is the process of growing miniaturized trees in tiny pots. This is done through aggressive trimming and manipulation of the plants environment and resources. Because it is a process, bonsai can be used (with varying success) on just about any type of woody plant material.

The reason most people think of bonsai trees as indoor show trees is because that is where they are most often seen: at a show or exhibit. Being that they are trees however, most species don’t mind – and in fact prefer – being outside.

Metasequoia is a hardy species that requires dormancy as part of its life cycle. This means that it will (at least in cold climes) drop its leaves in the fall and essentially hibernate. Since you live in California, chances are good that it will significantly shorten or even abandon that dormancy. Obviously redwoods do well in your neck of the woods so I wouldn’t worry.

Sounds to me like you’d like to display your tree indoors. My advice would be to place it in a nicely lighted area with dappled sun. I would keep it near the window until you want to display it and then move it to the display site. When not “on display” it should be returned to its grow site.

The biggest trouble you’ll get into indoors is watering. The tree won’t get natural rain and unless you water it religiously, it may suddenly dry out. This usually leads to death with Metasequoia.

Please note that there was a second, follow-up to this post. It can be found at:

http://open.salon.com/blog/jeff_howe/2009/06/14/raising_dawn_redwoods_as_bonsai_part_ii

I also have a separate web site where I comment on plants, trees and growing:

http://littlebigtrees.blogspot.com/

Good luck. If you have further questions, I am most easily contacted at the email address listed on the Little Big Trees web site.
I See. Well, thanks Jeff. Your really are an expert.^_^