Komentáře •

  • @TheBonsaiZone
    @TheBonsaiZone Před rokem +10

    Wow, nice to see the wonders of the desert, I hope you did a sandwalk to not attract the sandworms!

  • @BlueJayBonsai
    @BlueJayBonsai Před rokem +4

    Looks like you had a great time Jerome! Sometimes you are surrounded by amazing trees, but you just can’t collect them for one reason or another. At least others can still enjoy the trees in nature! 🐦💙

  • @lbdilliner
    @lbdilliner Před rokem +2

    Cal Junipers are everywhere
    It takes years to find the honey hole for Bonsai quality.
    If you really want one go see Roy in Sylmar at Fuji Nursery. He had already done the work. $$$$

  • @saturnynetitan
    @saturnynetitan Před rokem +1

    Jeep Gladiator, roaming the desert looking for potential bonsai? Oh yeah! Another good video Jerome! Thank you for all the hard work.

  • @sbragaglia
    @sbragaglia Před rokem +2

    Oh man! That’s a trip!
    Looks quite different from the Matterhorn!

  • @raymondplodzien7459
    @raymondplodzien7459 Před rokem +1

    Beautiful area Jerome. Looked like a fun day.

  • @airford13
    @airford13 Před rokem +1

    would love to see more vids like this! very entertaining!

  • @alessandromassimo5717
    @alessandromassimo5717 Před rokem +3

    i air layerd a 400 years juniper branch like the big one you showed and manage to get it, i hope it will pass winter but for now it still is green (i have watered it once a month) did i get lucky?

    • @november8039
      @november8039 Před rokem +1

      Wow! I've been wanting to give that a shot for a while now but I've been overthinking it. Any words of advice to get successful rooting?

    • @alessandromassimo5717
      @alessandromassimo5717 Před rokem +2

      @@november8039 you have to be lucky with climate. i have this juniper 15' walk from my parents house. it is gnarly and twisted. i took a 6-7 cm branch with good foliage n a little deadwood shari feature and used normal air layer technique with sphagnum and perlite but very big bag compared to what i see online, in 27 march (we dont get snow or below freezing here during winter). i put iuta mats around the juniper roots and branch to keep it wet and cool (just some spots not complitely covered). i applied agricultural (to the plant not the airlayer) fertileser npk 138 just the first time. and watered once a month the tree with humic acids and algae extract (cheap one not for bonsai just for agriculturlar purpose) and olso spray algae extract on the foliage of the air layer. for the air layer i used normal water. so every mont i went there with 10 liters of water with humic and algae and 2-3 liters of normal water. 1 november i could see roots and i cut the air layer. i was lucky because there was rain during the periods i didnt watered it during summer

    • @november8039
      @november8039 Před rokem +1

      I'm gonna give it a shot, thanks a ton

  • @BenBSeattle
    @BenBSeattle Před rokem

    Great video man

  • @tradhunter5976
    @tradhunter5976 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for sharing. I know one of the locations you were in as it is near my friends property and I have seen a couple of the exact junipers myself. I'll be mapping and tagging a few junipers next week for collecting next month if conditions are right.

    • @WeareTheBonsaiSupply
      @WeareTheBonsaiSupply Před rokem +1

      Ohh that’s cool! You are probably referring to the neighborhood spot?

  • @bonsaipage_
    @bonsaipage_ Před rokem +1

    Great information!

  • @sagebonsai
    @sagebonsai Před rokem

    Thanks Jerome for adding sagebrush to your video content, after all it's my favorite. If you have any questions on sagebrush I have five years experience working on these delicate shrubs.

    • @WeareTheBonsaiSupply
      @WeareTheBonsaiSupply Před rokem

      Well fire away! I need to know everything..😆 is there anyone that sells collected sage brushes?

  • @fuadadam3714
    @fuadadam3714 Před 11 měsíci

    Ingin rasanya berburu disana gan

  • @natesipe
    @natesipe Před rokem

    Enjoy the beauty of Nature. Please don’t collect from public lands which are very vulnerable to over use and exploitation. These trees have lived in for a long time in peace. Thank you for the inspiration to be responsible and tranquil in this world with other species.

  • @igaudion973
    @igaudion973 Před rokem

    FASCINATING!

  • @tanyepnyepnyep9155
    @tanyepnyepnyep9155 Před rokem

    Waao👍👍👍👍

  • @thomasplaster155
    @thomasplaster155 Před rokem

    This was great! I love the Yamadori and have “collected” my bonsai from struggling plants in my yard- not very exotic but quite satisfying.
    For a future video, would you consider some instructions around “pinching” for pines? This is a concept I can’t figure out from books and would love to understand before next spring.
    Again, thanks for the informative and fun content!

  • @henzobonsai
    @henzobonsai Před rokem

    👍👍👍

  • @Chris-oq6kn
    @Chris-oq6kn Před rokem +2

    Awesome video jerome. Id be pretty sad to go out there and not find anything but i would enjoy the experience of being there. Makes u wonder if they were all dug up by bonsai people already.

    • @WeareTheBonsaiSupply
      @WeareTheBonsaiSupply Před rokem +3

      Thank you Chris! That’s what I have been told all these years that all the good ones are taken but I found about 8 fantastic junipers in just one pocket. I believe there is so much land that has not been explored yet by the bonsai community. However, I am not sure if we should since these trees are ancient, and should be left in their natural environment.

    • @Chris-oq6kn
      @Chris-oq6kn Před rokem

      @@WeareTheBonsaiSupply oh u so u did find some! Great! Are any going up on an auction?🤣 thats pretty special i would say. I agree some should stay in their habitat but we kno how people are.

    • @WeareTheBonsaiSupply
      @WeareTheBonsaiSupply Před rokem +3

      @@Chris-oq6kn I actually didn't collect any. I am struggling with making up my mind if this is something that should be done for personal pleasure or not. Most Yamadori collected in nature don't make it, about 50% die even with experienced collectors this is just kind of the nature of it. So it would be super cool to bring one home but at what cost.

  • @yoteslaya7296
    @yoteslaya7296 Před rokem +2

    Would definitely be on the lookout for Mojave rattlesnakes. The most venomous of all rattlesnakes

    • @WeareTheBonsaiSupply
      @WeareTheBonsaiSupply Před rokem +1

      Ohhh yeah that was my number 1 concern although I was told by locals that this time of the year it is impossible to see one as they hide when the temps drop. Not sure if that’s true but I took their word for it 😅

    • @yoteslaya7296
      @yoteslaya7296 Před rokem +1

      @@WeareTheBonsaiSupply they actually do. Its called brumating they go underground. Id still be looking though 🤣

    • @WeareTheBonsaiSupply
      @WeareTheBonsaiSupply Před rokem

      @@yoteslaya7296 I don't know if looking alone will help. They blend in very well with the surrounding vegetation. I was carefully trying to listen for a riddle every time I went off road lol

  • @november8039
    @november8039 Před rokem

    Those pines look to me like Pinus monophylla, single needle piñon.

  • @getintothewildwithjeffruma8777

    The desert is a beautiful place but one must be careful.

  • @monkichiboi4003
    @monkichiboi4003 Před rokem

    OMG JHEROME THIS VIDEO RIVALS WITH MAURO ON YAMADORI HUNTING PLEASE MAKE MORE VIDS LIKE THIS! btw were you visiting CA for this vid?

  • @monkichiboi4003
    @monkichiboi4003 Před rokem

    tree at 2:05 would sell for 25k easily if styled right

  • @Dave_0993_I
    @Dave_0993_I Před rokem

    Nice change.
    BTW, I'd like to recommend an artist for 'Coffee and Bonsai' if you're interested: Arthur Joura of the North Carolina Arboretum. Another channel just posted a nice vid of him doing a demo, "Appalachian Bonsai". He has visited our club in Harrisburg, PA several times, and what a great artist, and all around great guy. Just a thought. Cheers.

  • @arnoldmmbb
    @arnoldmmbb Před rokem

    Maybe those are some kind of Pinyon Pine or Single leaf Pine

    • @WeareTheBonsaiSupply
      @WeareTheBonsaiSupply Před rokem

      That’s a good guess!

    • @isamuzak468
      @isamuzak468 Před rokem

      @@WeareTheBonsaiSupply it is a pinyon pine, there are thousands of junipers, sagebrushes and pinyon pines in White Mountain.

  • @222foont
    @222foont Před 9 měsíci

    Dig much?

  • @natesipe
    @natesipe Před rokem +1

    Desert species are living in a sacred space that does not exist outside of there, such as in your yard. Do not collect this delicate life.

  • @eyeye_agent
    @eyeye_agent Před 2 měsíci

    FYI…BLM land is a public land.