Bonsai
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Bonsai Repotting Pot: The Wrong Choice Can Kill Your Tree — Here’s What Actually Works
Most bonsai beginners obsess over the tree. They research species, study pruning, and track watering schedules. Then repotting day comes, and they grab whatever container looks nice. That mistake costs months of growth, and sometimes the tree itself. The bonsai repotting pot you choose is not just decoration. It controls root space, moisture retention, drainage
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Bonsai Root Pruning Tools: Where to Save vs Splurge (and What Actually Breaks)
If you’re building or upgrading a kit, bonsai root pruning tools are where forum debates get loud: “Just buy the cheap ones—they’re all from the same factory.” Then someone posts a snapped blade and a ruined nebari. The useful answer is more specific than either extreme. This guide explains what bonsai root pruning tools are
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Bonsai Tool Sterilization: The Overlooked Step That Protects Every Cut
Root pruning, branch pruning, and repotting are among the most consequential procedures in bonsai cultivation. You are cutting into living tissue, creating open wounds that are highly vulnerable to bacterial infection, fungal pathogens, and cross-contamination. Yet one of the most overlooked steps in the entire process is what happens before the first cut: bonsai tool
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Can You Use a Concave Cutter for Bonsai Root Pruning? Yes—Here’s When (and When Not To)
Can you use a concave cutter for bonsai root pruning? Yes—in narrow situations. For most repotting work, other tools do the job better and spare your cutter’s edge. This article answers when a concave cutter belongs in root work, when it does not, and what to use instead so your trees and tools stay healthy.
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How to Use Bonsai Wire Cutters on Roots (Without Stripping Bark)—Step by Step
If you want to know how to use bonsai wire cutters on roots without crushing tissue or stripping bark, the short answer is: treat them as a precision tool for wire removal and for very small roots in tight spots—not as a substitute for root shears on thick wood. Most beginners quietly damage roots by
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How to Use a Bonsai Root Hook: Step-by-Step Repotting (Without Tearing Roots)
If you’ve ever repotted a bonsai and found yourself pulling, tearing, or guessing your way through a tangled root ball, you already know the problem. Most beginners treat root work as an afterthought. Learning how to use a bonsai root hook properly—angle, pressure, and sequence—matters as much as choosing the tool itself. A bonsai root
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Bonsai Root Washing Container: What to Use, What to Skip & How to Size It
Whether you are bare-rooting a tree during bonsai repotting, rinsing old akadama or soil mix off the root pad, or inspecting roots before pruning, the bonsai root washing container you use shapes how safely and quickly the job goes. The wrong size or material can stress fine roots, make rinsing inefficient, or introduce contaminants. This
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Bonsai Root Rake: How to Use It, Pick the Right Type, and Protect Your Roots
If you repot bonsai trees, you need a way to loosen old soil and comb roots without tearing them. That is the job of a bonsai root rake—a small, tined tool made for working through the root ball during repotting. Using the wrong implement (or only your fingers) often bruises or breaks roots you spent
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How to Choose Bonsai Root Scissors: 4 Things Smart Buyers Check First
Knowing how to choose bonsai root scissors saves you from buying the wrong tool twice: a pair that looks fine in photos but dulls after one repot, or one sized for foliage when you need precision at the root ball. This guide walks through what actually matters when you compare models—steel, blade shape, handles, and
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Bonsai Root Pruning Overwatering: 7 Signs You’re Watering Too Much
Root pruning is one of the most stressful procedures you can perform on a bonsai. Done correctly, it rejuvenates the tree and keeps it thriving for decades. The days and weeks that follow are fragile—and bonsai root pruning overwatering (watering too much while the tree is still recovering) is one of the most common ways
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Bonsai leaf drop after root pruning: normal stress—or a red flag?
You just finished root pruning your bonsai, carefully repotted it, watered it well — and now the leaves are dropping. Panic sets in. Did you do something wrong? Is your tree dying? Take a breath. Bonsai leaf drop after root pruning is, in most cases, a normal stress response: your tree is matching foliage to
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Root Fungus in Bonsai After Repotting? How to Spot It, Treat It & Save Your Tree
Repotting is one of the most stressful events in a bonsai’s life — and it is also when root fungus in bonsai after repotting most often shows up. Fresh cuts, disturbed soil, and wet substrate give fungal pathogens an opening. If you have noticed white fuzz, brown mushy roots, or a foul smell soon after












