nimbus1376
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Joined: Fri Nov 20, 2015 5:15 pm

chinese elm

I am a novice in the realm of bonsai and had a question that I cannot seem to find a good answer for. I live in PA (zone 5) and have all of my outdoor trees stored in bins covered in mulch to the first branch in an unheated garage with southern exposure by a window. I recently acquired a Chinese elm and am unsure as to whether overwintering outside versus inside is best. I have a strong grow light and heat mat for my tropicals this winter and I am also not sure whether to subject the elm to these modalities should I opt to keep it indoors. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

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rainbowgardener
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Posts: 25279
Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
Location: TN/GA 7b

It is a bit of a dilemma and I think the answer (at least partly) depends on how it has been treated up to now.

Chinese elm is a sort of in-between tree. Temperate trees (evergreens like juniper and deciduous like maple, oak) have to be outdoors all the time. Tropical evergreens like ficus make good indoor trees. Chinese elm is a subtropical. Some people do keep them indoors. If yours is used to being indoors, I wouldn't put it out now, if it is already cold and snowy where you are. To winter over outside, they need to go through the autumn, to gradually toughen themselves for winter. After the weather warms up next spring, you can gradually transition it to outdoors.
Chinese Elm trees are very flexible about their environment. If adapted
properly, they can be grown indoors year-round. If hardened off to
the cold gradually, they can drop their leaves in the fall and be
considered deciduous trees, so you have a few options. However, it is
important to find out how your Elm has been growing recently. Some
Elms come from southern China, and have never experienced cold
conditions. It would be dangerous to keep these Elms too cold the
first year or two. Other Elms have gone to freezing and dropped their
leaves for many years; as a result, these Elms may not be too happy
indoors for the first year or two. If you can not determine where your
Elm has been, then keep it outside for the summer and bring it inside
for the winter. You can bring it in when the temperatures are around
50°F. If kept indoors for the winter, a cooler location is preferable
(50°F–65°F). Chinese Elms may drop some leaves in the winter due
to the natural decrease in light. This is normal.
https://www.nebonsai.com/Chinese_elm.pdf[/quote]

nimbus1376
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Posts: 2
Joined: Fri Nov 20, 2015 5:15 pm

many thanks for the prompt and informative response. I'll overwinter the elm indoors and next year let it harden through the fall and enter winter dormancy. I'll avoid the heat mat, but do you think the grow lamp is a good idea?



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