Shohin juniper

The special care of palm-sized bonsai

Shohin juniper

Postby lewisjk » Oct 02, 2010 10:14 am

This is my only formal upright. I do very few conifers (we don't seem to get along real well).

My notes list this as a J. chinensis, but as the years go by and I see no "adult" foliage, I'm thinking more and more that it may be J. procumbens.

I'm beginning to think that the lower branches look a bit long and spindly. What say you?

It stands 13 inches, including pot. If you are a fanatic devotee of the 10-inch limit for shohin I'm sorry. The overall weight of the tree dictates "shohin" to me.
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Jim - Western NC - zone 7-8
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Re: Shohin juniper

Postby plantmanky » Oct 02, 2010 11:11 am

lewisjk wrote:This is my only formal upright. I do very few conifers (we don't seem to get along real well).

My notes list this as a J. chinensis, but as the years go by and I see no "adult" foliage, I'm thinking more and more that it may be J. procumbens.

I'm beginning to think that the lower branches look a bit long and spindly. What say you?

It stands 13 inches, including pot. If you are a fanatic devotee of the 10-inch limit for shohin I'm sorry. The overall weight of the tree dictates "shohin" to me.


Hard to tell from the pic and give a definitive answer on whether it's a procumbens or not, but I would vote initially for a J. chinensis cultivar of some sort and not procumbens. As far as the lower branches go, I think their fine, but need to be flattened out and let grow to be come thicker with foliage. I like you, am not a stickler for absolute adherence to size. As far as I'm concerned, if it's close within an inch or two it's in! :D It is a very nice design and definately reminds me of many trees I've seen on collecting trips to the mountains above 8,000 feet in elevation. Good Job bud!
Randy Davis
Boaz, Kentucky US growing zone 6A
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Re: Shohin juniper

Postby BillsBayou » Oct 05, 2010 11:14 am

I'd vote Juniperus chinensis 'Foemina'. It looks like mine, just a great deal shorter. The needles on mine took a while to develop into the adult type. It needed more foliage to make the transition. I think your tree is too straight to be a procumbens.
Bill Butler - New Orleans, Zone 9
Greater New Orleans Bonsai Society

"A fool sees not the same tree that a wise man sees." - William Blake
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Re: Shohin juniper

Postby lewisjk » Oct 05, 2010 3:05 pm

Weeeel, I dunno . . . Here is a 2-ft. tall procumbens that is part of the N.C. Arboretum Collection in Asheville.

By the by, you all are invited to the Carolina Bonsai Expo at the Arboretum next weekend. You can see this tree, no on display as part of the Arboretum collection and well as trees from clubs in all the surrounding states and North Carolina.
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Re: Shohin juniper

Postby owen14 » Oct 17, 2010 8:47 pm

I like the tree, I just wonder why you chose to use such a large accessory rock behind the base of the tree. I think it takes away from the depth of the tree.

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Re: Shohin juniper

Postby lewisjk » Oct 18, 2010 9:36 am

Well, the rocks come and the rocks go to suit my whim of the day. Currently, I see this as a landscape planting -- a lone tree in a mountain meadow. Next week/month/year, who knows?
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