Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Bonsai Tree that I Love

Thanks to my friends at the bookstore where I used to work, I now have a Bonsai (BAHN- sigh) tree. Here it is sitting in its new ceramic tray, but not planted in the tray. It's still growing in its original plastic tray. This is because Bonsai trees are very emotional. I did not know this when I bought it.

Upon getting it home, Outside the Box and I looked up how to care for Bonsai trees and were surprised to read that they frequently stress out just moving from place to place- like from the kitchen to the living room. They must have special Bonsai soil that does not stay as wet as normal potting soil, must be watered lightly, daily, but not so much as to cause root rot and need light, but cannot tolerate direct sunlight that shines through the window- it must be filtered in some way. If the Bonsai does not get what it wants, the leaves will drop off, leaving the owner with an interesting, curvy trunk of sadness.

I was so excited to get the Bonsai. I've always wanted one. But it isn't something I would just up and buy for myself, because they are expensive. With the gift card, I felt free to go ahead and treat myself and I had enough to get Outside the Box a Bonsai, too- for his new office. He likes plants, so I knew he'd be into it. We would have fun growing these little trees together. Anyway, after reading the Bonsai Gardner, I became a little nervous about whether or not I could handle caring for this mini-tree in a tray. I mean, I have issues of my own. The trees had spent the better part of the day in my car, since I bought them and then went shopping with Fash, before bringing them to the kitchen table, where they sat for several hours until Outside the Box moved his to his bedroom and later to his office. I figured that one would have no leaves left by morning.


The second day we owned the Bonsai trees, Outside the Box discovered that mine was blooming! He took a picture of the tiny, white flowers with his camera phone and sent me the alert, as I was running errands most of that day. I couldn't believe it, but when I got home there were four blooms and several buds on my tree. Amazing! Especially since I had moved it from the kitchen table to the coffee table to a side table under a mirror and back to the coffee table, because I couldn't decide where it could get the correct amount of filtered sunlight. I also now feared I'd over watered it, when I'd held it under a fountain in the store before bringing it home- it had seemed so dried out. I kept checking it for root rot about every hour for the first full day I owned it. I was getting kind of stressed out, though I really like having the Bonsai.

On the third day, Fash and I were doing a Bible study in the living room and we noticed several leaves scattered around the drip tray of the planter on the coffee table. I inhaled sharply and put my face close to the Bonsai. I blew on it. Fifteen teeny leaves dropped from the tree. It was happening. The Bonsai was stressing out and going berserk. Though I don't actually have a picture of this. We'd moved it too much. So I started talking to it. Thankfully, we do not have a picture of this either.


I hope I can keep my new Bonsai alive. Outside the Box says his has also dropped some leaves. I think the Bonsai Gardener says, "your new Bonsai may feel so stressed out that he will drop all of his leaves, but take heart- they will grow back- if the soil is right, the water not too wet and the sunlight properly filtered." The Bonsai Gardener promises that growing a Bonsai tree is challenging, yet rewarding. I want to re-pot mine into the new, ceramic tray I bought for it, but I'm too scared. I want it to live.


The white flowers are still blooming, but I seem to have a lot of extra hair in my brush. It's funny that the Bonsai came with a little stone on a stick stuck in the special Bonsai soil of the plastic tray, on which is engraved the word- "peace". I wonder what that means. Maybe it means if the tree cannot express it, the rocks will cry out.

I also bought this tropical type plant, whose name I cannot recall- it gets one, orange bloom in the middle of a leaf spray that will last a good two months, then shrivel and never bloom from the center of that spray again. Instead, a shoot will come out of the side of this cutting and an orange bloom will appear in the middle of the side spray. This one seems to be completely comfortable in the kitchen, dining area, bath or living room. Does anyone know the name of this plant?

Heidi

17 comments:

Becky said...

Bromiliad (bro-MILL-ee-yad). I'm not sure I spelled that right and neither is my spell check. They come in tons of varieties.

I was LOL about your bonsai. I bought one many years ago... it had white flowers too. Until I killed it. I felt so bad too cuz the little Oriental man who sold it to me handed it over like it was one of his children.

Mari said...

I love bonsai trees but I would never be able to keep one alive. It's a standing joke here that the kids are happy I kept them alive, because of what I do to plants.
Good luck!

Heidi said...

Okay gals (guys), I'm getting more nervous than I was before. Is it really THAT hard to keep one of these miniature trees alive. Just this morning I have moved mine to twelve different locations in our home trying to find the right amount of filtered light for it. The leaves are dropping and only one little white flower left. I have tears in my eyes right now.

Greg the gardening Examiner- do you know what I can do??

Help.

Greg C said...

Quit moving the tree. Pick a location where you might like it to stay and leave it there. If it doesn't begin to look better after a few weeks then possibly it isn't a good location. Secondly since you are already shocking the plant, don't repot it yet. If it is a pot that you like, keep it until the plant has recovered and then repot it. When you do, make sure that the pot is only a very small bit larger than the original pot. If you go from a small to a much larger pot, the plant will go crazy. Also when you finally repot the tree, make sure and use the right soil. It shouldn't be too rich. There are more difficult plants to grow so don't give up. You can do it.

Greg C said...

Oh I think Becky is right on the other plant. They are also sometimes called corn plants. I had a huge one and then for some reason it just died. It was only 10 degrees outside, whats' up with that? Oops I forgot to take it in.

Jientje said...

You are too funny!!
I have reasonably green fingers, but not for bonsai, and not for indoor plants. My apartment is way too dark to keep anything alive. I'm afraid my sunlight was filtered too much here! LOL! The bottom one is one you cannot kill in my opinion. They're very very strong plants.

Heidi said...

Thanks for the tips and encouragement. I am not going to move it anymore today or tomorrow. The leaves are not dropping at the moment, but some are turning black. But another flowering is popping open.I think I'd actually have more luck with a puppy. At least I could pet it.

Heart2Heart said...

Heidi,

I think you should listen to Greg since he has 8 green fingers and 2 green thumbs for making things grow.

I love all the pictures you have sent and I too don't think I can grow one of these!

Love and Hugs ~ Kat

Mrs. E said...

Oh my. This is too touchy for my brown thumb! I will just enjoy yours...it will adjust! (Keep posting pictures. It is sooo pretty!)

Dandy said...

Oh I love bonsai! In fact I'm having one made out of origami cranes for my wedding.

They are tempermental, sensitive little things though. :)

KrippledWarrior said...

Heidi,
Thanks for dropping by. I'm a compulsive nit-pick so I'll apologize up front (something I usually avoid).
Bonsai is pronounced BAHN Sigh.
Secondly, your tree is flowering. So it is a female. Not a male. We blush. We don't flower.
Good pick for a start. if yiu can keep her alive you can grow anything.
KW

40winkzzz said...

remind me never to get one of these- i don't need anymore stress. i have a hard enough time just keeping fake plants alive.

but *you*, heidi, can do it. you are da woman and you can do anything.

e had a little bonsai plant once. now that i read about how sensitive they are, i'm surprised hers survived at all. it was in our dining room for a few mos til ben's friend threw something & knocked it over, then she moved it to the downstairs bathroom where it survived a while longer before succumbing to fumes or something.

Kim said...

You know how kids sense mom's stress and act out even more? I think the Bonsai is channeling your stress!

Or at least that's as good a theory as any :-) Considering that I've managed to kill 99.9% of all plants I've ever owned, you might want to ignore anything I say though.

Heidi said...

Changed the pronunciation key to BAHN-sigh per Kurt's correction. Thank you, KW, I don't like to be wrong.

Gayle said...

That is one high maintenance plant! It would never survive my plant care taking methods.

God a Have Faith said...

Oh no! After reading Greg's comment I hope that you are able to leave it be and hope for the best! Give it to God and ask him to keep the tree happy and Healthy!

Keep us posted!

Steve

Edie said...

The visual of you searching for a place to keep your little tree where it won't stress made me LOL!

Take Greg's advice and keep us posted on the progress.