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Brazilian Rain Tree Bonsai Brown Ceramic Pot.wmv

Posted by admin on Feb 28, 2010 in Uncategorized

bonsai trees for sale


Brazilian Raintree Bonsai Rain Tree mybonsaibuddy.com Bonsai Trees For Sale

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Comments Off on Bonsai Tree Care Made Easy (75% Commission).

Bonsai Tree Care Made Easy (75% Commission).

Posted by admin on Feb 28, 2010 in Uncategorized

indoor bonsai trees
Cash In On The Ancient Art Of Bonsai Tree’s With The Launch Of A Break-Out Quality Product. You Make 75% On Each Sale. Make Money With Our Excellent EBook And Quality Salespage. See: www.BonsaiTreeCareCenter.com/affiliate-program.htm l.
Bonsai Tree Care Made Easy (75% Commission).

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5

Brussel’s Dwarf Crepe Myrtle Outdoor Bonsai Tree

Posted by admin on Feb 28, 2010 in Uncategorized

bonsai trees

  • Crepe myrtle bonsai; deciduous, outdoor tree
  • Dwarf variety produces deep-pink/purple blooms in summer
  • Grown in Chinese nurseries under carefully controlled conditions
  • Developed at U.S. National Arboretum
  • 5 years old; 7 inches tall

Brussel’s Dwarf Crepe Myrtle Outdoor Bonsai Tree

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Secrets of Growing Indoor Bonsai Trees

Posted by admin on Feb 28, 2010 in Uncategorized

indoor bonsai trees

Your house will look more beautiful with the addition of indoor bonsai trees. These plants are mostly cultivated by experts because there are certain techniques that should be used to limit the growth of the plants. They also need certain cares to make sure that they grow for years to come. When you buy one from a nursery, you need to continue taking care of the plant after it goes out from the shop. The price of indoor bonsai trees is not cheap so it is best to be careful with them.

A bonsai generally prefers outdoor condition, but with attentive care, it will flourish indoors. Every plant, including bonsai, needs enough light to grow properly. Therefore, the first thing you should consider in growing indoor bonsai is finding the right spot. It is a good idea to put your bonsai near the sunniest window in your house. However, you should be careful not to put the plant to close to the glass because it may produce excessive heat that is dangerous to the plant.

Alternatively, you can use artificial light for your indoor bonsai, especially if there is no enough sunlight during winter months. Twelve hours exposure everyday to fluorescent lamps is suitable for this purpose. You should not put the bonsai too close with the lamps though because the heat may harm the plant. One foot is the advisable distance in this case. An important note is that you should not put your bonsai near a window even if it is closed during winter. The cold temperature can seep in and it is very dangerous for the indoor bonsai. You should not put the plant near a radiator as well because it can dry up the soil quickly and eventually kill the bonsai.

An important factor for indoor bonsai to flourish is a humid environment. In order to achieve this condition, you can mist the leaves regularly. If you cannot mist the plant regularly, then you can use another strategy. You take a tray and fill it with water and pebbles. Then you put the bonsai pot on the tray. The pebbles prevent the water to soak the bonsai pot, while the water will evaporate and create a humid environment around the plant.

Besides these special treatments, you still need to do typical treatments that are normally done to a bonsai to make sure the survival of your indoor bonsai. It may seem a tedious work to take care of indoor bonsai trees, but if you implement these practices, you are increasing the chance of survival of the plants.

Cindy Heller is a professional writer. To learn more about indoor bonsai trees, please visit indoor bonsai care.

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25

How to Grow Bonsai Trees : How to Care for your Bonsai Tree : Bonsai Maintenance

Posted by admin on Feb 27, 2010 in Uncategorized

bonsai trees


Maintaining a bonsai garden is fun and easy with these DIY tips from a bonsai garden professional – free video. Expert: Mike Hansen Bio: Mike Hansen, owner of Midwest Bonsai, has been growing, caring, selling, and instructing others in bonsai care for years. Mike is an expert bonsai master.

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Help!! Someone Just Gave Me A Bonsai Tree!!

Posted by admin on Feb 27, 2010 in Uncategorized

indoor bonsai trees
Discover The 7 Simple Steps To Keeping Your Bonsai Tree Alive & Well. Excellent Beginners Resource Targeted To New Owners Of Bonsai Trees.
Help!! Someone Just Gave Me A Bonsai Tree!!

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2

A 4 to 5 Year Old Juniper Bonsai Tree

Posted by admin on Feb 27, 2010 in Uncategorized

bonsai trees

  • Easy Care Indoor and Outdoor Juniper Bonsai.
  • About 4 to 5 Year Old.
  • Handcrafted by Bonsai Etc. Nursery.
  • Sitting in a Quality, Handsome, Japanese Handmade Bonsai Bowl – “donburi” style container
  • Come with Instruction Sheet, and Organic Bonsai Foods.

Product Description
A 4 to 5 year old juniper bonsai trees crafted for anyone, especially those who wishes to for his/her first bonsai tree. This juniper tree has fresh green needles throughout the year and requires only minimal care.

The juniper is indeed one of the most popular bonsais grown in the States, its evergreen features and naturally cascading branches shows the intrinsic beauty of nature. Though many nurseries have claimed to grow and craft the trees; we DO NOT stick a tr… More >>

A 4 to 5 Year Old Juniper Bonsai Tree

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History Of Bonsai Trees

Posted by admin on Feb 26, 2010 in Uncategorized

bonsai trees

Trimming and sculpting trees to bonsai has a long history. The first bonsai trees should have been planted in China already about 2000 years ago in trays. People mentions the miniaturised creation of bonsai trees in China Pensai. Besides, the typical growth forms of the tree vegetation are postformed in some provinces as a Pensai. In other provinces Pensai are formed rather in weird, symbolical shapes, for example, in dragon’s figure.

China had traditionally a great influence on the cultural development of Japan. Thus the Buddhism could gain a foothold beside the state religion of the Shinto rather early in Japan. Walking monks of the Zen Buddhism brought therefore the first Pensai to Japan. In the culturally very open imperial city Kyoto noble ladies and gentlemen soon dealt beside the art of the ikebana and the tea ceremony with the small bonsai trees.

In the 17th and 18th century the Japanese bonsai art reached their peak. It had become a part of the Japanese way of life. Bonsai had served to better understand the nature and to improve in appearance. The main factor in the development of the bonsai was the restriction on the most important parts of the plant. All apparently dispensable parts were removed. The removal of all insignificant and the reduction on the essential elements for the final improvement was symbolic for the Japanese philosophy of that time. Bonsai developed in different style directions which considerably differed of each other. Bonsai artists attempted more and more culturally important elements like rock to realise accent works.

After more than 230 years of the global isolation Japan opened at the middle of 19th century to the rest of the world. The travellers came back from Japan and had seen the miniature trees in the ceramic containers which copied ripe, high trees in the nature. Then at the end of the century exhibitions followed in London, Vienna and Paris. Especially the Paris world exhibition in 1900 announced bonsai to the wide world public. The inquiry for bonsai started to rise rapidly. The lack of natural small-grown trees led to the commercial production of the bonsai. Several basic styles asserted themselves. The bonsai artists made use of wire, bamboo canes and other technologies to influence growing, shaping and developing.

Still today bonsai is highly respected as a symbol of the japanese culture and ideals. Nowadays in Japan bonsai is not left any more only to the upper class, but has asserted itself in all social classes. Japanese incline especially with pleasure to use only native species for their bonsai trees. In particular pines, azaleas and maple are looked as the traditional bonsai trees. In other countries people are not fixed and uses also many other tree species for growing bonsai under the most different climatic conditions. Particularly in last decades the development of the bonsai was going on. The bonsai world has become smaller. All over the world people began, whether in Asia, in Europe, in the United States and even in Greenland, to discover bonsai as their hobby. In the meantime, bonsai art also reflected the great variety in predilections and characteristics of the most different countries and their cultures.

With proper care bonsai trees can become hundreds of years old. Such highly respected specimens are transmitted from generation to generation and are admired for their age and revered. The aging of the bonsai trees is often connected also with the events in the life of the people that have looked in the course of the centuries after them. Such old bonsai trees are extremely beautiful. Nevertheless, with the bonsai tree the age hasn’t the highest priority, however caring bonsai for years away and developing of the knowledge about the tree. It is most important that a bonsai tree can generate his desired artistic effect and grows up in the right proportion to the suitable container, so that the tree can develop with good health.

John Fisher, the owner of Bonsai Care, like to share information and advices on growing, trimming, sculpting and pruning bonsai and will introduce you to bonsai techniques and how to grow your own bonsai tree.

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Comments Off on Bonsai Tree Care Made Easy (50% Commission).

Bonsai Tree Care Made Easy (50% Commission).

Posted by admin on Feb 26, 2010 in Uncategorized

bonsai trees for sale
Cash In On The Ancient Art Of Bonsai Tree’s With The Launch Of A Break-Out Quality Product. You Make 50% On Each Sale. Make Money With Our Excellent EBook And Quality Salespage. See: Http://www.bonsaitreecarecenter.com/affiliate-prog ram.html.
Bonsai Tree Care Made Easy (50% Commission).

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Brussel’s Podocarpus Indoor Bonsai Tree

Posted by admin on Feb 26, 2010 in Uncategorized

indoor bonsai trees

  • Podocarpus bonsai; tropical, indoor tree
  • Adapts well to variety of indoor conditions
  • Pine-like foliage resembles styles of larger, specimen trees
  • Grown under carefully controlled conditions
  • 5 years old, 6 to 10 inches tall; 6-inch, glazed, rectangular pot

Brussel’s Podocarpus Indoor Bonsai Tree

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