Ahh that “Vault” is looking good (The bit I can see of it). I hope you still have my reservation, for it to be my final resting place. !!
…grinning…
So Jon will that grow to a solid hedge? Any concern on the roots?
Ric Golding said:No, I'll keep it trimmed to separate small trees. The roots shouldn't be a problem, directly under them the tunnel is that corrugated PVC pipe.
So Jon will that grow to a solid hedge? Any concern on the roots?
And Fred; your reservation for “Sot 1” in the vault has been fully paid for
They look good John. I’ve used several of them in my railroad.
I want to be one of the boys! Here are a couple of new plants.
(http://i234.photobucket.com/albums/ee259/smcgill_pics/Bonzi005jpg-1.jpg)
(http://i234.photobucket.com/albums/ee259/smcgill_pics/BONZI03jpg-1.jpg)
(http://i234.photobucket.com/albums/ee259/smcgill_pics/Bonzi004jpg-1.jpg)
Three alberta spuces,one holly,a mugo pine,one maple… Should be interesting. Sean
I found a dwarf Blue Spruce at a nursery. So I bought it. Used to find junipers that were good to bonsai, but have not found any good ones lately.
Jon & Sean,
Just looking for an update. What worked? What didn’t? Any tips?
Herself and I joined a bonsai club with the idea we’d grow them on the railway. With the garden addition 6 months ago I double potted the bonsai trees thinking I’d have an air gap and could rip roots out with ease.
Ha! That didn’t work!
Here’s 6 months or so of benign neglect.
And back into the ground….
I just play with the dwarf Alberta spruces … I have trimmed mine in a while though
Wow, digging deep Bill - 2010!
I fixed the picture link in my posts. This thread goes back to the days when I posted one low-rez (800px) and one higher rez (1280px) for every shot, with links to the hi rez embedded in the low rez shot. I got rid of all that and trimmed to just the higher rez since LSC now automatically sizes them.
To answer some of your questions; The Arborvitaes have gotten large enough that now trim them with a power hedge trimmer to keep them rounded. I lost most of my Dwarf Alberta Spruce trees about 5 winters ago. The few that remain don’t grow much and haven’t been trimmed further. And with the Boxwoods, I am fighting a blight of some sort. I finally cut down the huge one (5 ft tall) last summer and lost a few of the small ones. The rest I’m still trimming bad branches off so they are looking a little ragged.
The volunteers I spoke of turned out to be Hemlock. There is a hedge row of them on my West lot line and the seeds plant themselves all over my lot. Two years ago I started trying to shape them and so far, they look OK. I’ll get some recent pictures today.
In the thread I was asked about the group I planted above Fred’s Tomb. I said I was going to keep them trimmed as separate trees. I did not. They have grown to make a nice hedge row view block at the East end of my RR.
As promised, some current pictures some 14 years later. Here is a before and after shot of the view block at Fred’s Tomb (AKA Deep Cut Tunnel). From 2010…
Above, at left, is a volunteer Hemlock that was topped and trimmed last spring. Here’s a few more that I’m trying to shape…
Two of several Boxwoods that are struggling to survive…
At left above is a tree that is almost as old as the railroad and has never been trimmed. Very slow growth. The ID card has long since disintegrated so I don’t know what it is. Was sold at a local nursery labeled 'For Garden Railroads".
There is a lot in this shot. Behind the hotel is a Boxwood. There is another between tall rounded Arborvitae trees. I left behind the trunks of several Dwarf Albert Spruces that died thinking I might someday rig them as a spar pole system for logging…
The same area, but in this shot is one of the few Dwarf Alberta Spruces that survive at center of frame in front of the hotel…
And finally, a new stand of Arborvitae planted in the 2022 season that have struggled to grow. I think I lost all of one and half of two…
On my maybe list for this season is to replace the landscape blocks in the above shot with natural rock. I have plenty of rock, just need motivation!
Thanks for the update Jon. They’ve done quite well.
You having a local nursery labeling plants “for garden railways” is amazing. I’ve found two other g-scalers in SA and I’m the only one building outside. So no chance of seeing special nursery labels here.
Our trees are olives, ashes and elms mainly dug up from the nearby national park as they are considered introduced noxious species. They all want to reach for the sky unfortunately. Will keep an eye open for arborvitae.
…and that wall you’ve built in the background of your last photo is a
Tetris masterpiece!
That is my neighbors yard. One of his tenants built it from rocks laying around the property. All dry stack.
Looking at the leaf shape I’d hazard a guess it’s Cham. Obtusa Nana or a very close cousin.
ncsu.edu/plants/chamaecyparis-obtusa-nana-gracilis
Also rated for bonsai Bill.
Cheers
N