Our Current Program Update

There has been plenty of bonsai activity involving our club and members in recent months, with several very interesting meeting topics, along with our workshop days.

Since the Club Annual Exhibition in March, the Club’s April meeting included a fascinating presentation by Barry Woods on developing native species bonsai as mini-sized trees in small containers, while the May Club meeting had a presentation on Neutrog fertilizers, followed by a review of the progress and changes on some of the trees which have been the subject of past demonstrations.

In late May, a number of club members assembled at Kuranga Native Nursery in Mt Evelyn, where we were hosted for a tour of the nursery and surrounding gardens by Managing Director, Ben Sharp. This was an excellent look at some of the wide range of species and cultivars of native plants, with plenty of ideas for possible bonsai amongst the stock available at Kuranga.

The Club’s June meeting gave an opportunity to have a look at a range of different species and genera of native plants which are unusual or not often grown as bonsai. Along with a couple of examples brought home by members after the AABC Convention in Hobart, we found an interesting set of odd species being developed by some of our members.

Coming Up in the Club’s July meeting – a discussion on Australian native conifer species as bonsai.

With about 40 (or so) species of native conifers found across Australia, ranging from the northern tropics through the drier inland hills and plains, and to the cooler southern alpine areas of Tasmania, we have a most interesting range of species with different characteristics and growth habits. A number of these are already being grown as bonsai, and this meeting will be a chance to review some of these to see how they have responded to bonsai training, and to understand what other species might be worth trying as bonsai.