"How to Make Dwarf Trees For Table"
(1900):
"A curious but successful way of dwarfing plants for table decoration is to take an orange, and, having cut a small
hole in the peel, to remove all pulp and juice, fill the skin thus emptied with some cocoanut fibre, fine moss, and
charcoal, just stiffened with a little loam. In the centre of this put an acorn, date stone, or the seed or
kernel of any tree that it is proposed to obtain a dwarf from [sic] Place the orange
peel in a tumbler or vase in a window, and moisten the contents occasionally with a little water through the hole in the
peel, and sprinkle the surface with fine wood ashes. In due time the tree will push up its stem through the compost
and its roots through the orange peel. The roots must then be cut flush with the peel, and the process repeated
frequently for some time. The stem of the tree will assume a stunted gnarled appearance, making it look like
an old tree. When the ends of the roots are cut for the last time, the orange peel, which, curiously enough,
does not rot, may be painted black and varnished. -- N.Y. Advertiser"
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1 The Queensland Agricultural Journal (Brisbane, ed. by A.J. Boyd, F.R.G.S.Q.), Vol. VII,
1 July 1900, pg.
86.
And then Lindsay Facebook-messaged me on Nov. 3, 2022 with the following from Bairnsdale Advertiser and Tambo and Omeo Chronicle (Vic. : 1882 - 1918), Saturday 21 September 1901, an article entitled "Japanese Tree Dwarfings": "The Japanese gardeners make a secret of the means by which the miniature trees are produced, but, like many other mysteries, the secret has been discovered by the curious occidental. It is simple enough, consisting only in the cutting of the roots when they first begin to sprout. Suppose a miniature oak tree is desired. The Japanese gardener takes an acorn and an orange. He carefully scoops out the interior of the orange and fills the skin with rch mould. Exactly in the centre he places the acorn, leaving a round hole in a line with the sprouting point. He puts his orange in a sunny place and waters it every day. Soon he first shoot appears, and in a very short time afterward the roots break through the orange skin. These are shaved off continually. The tree grows to about five inches high and then stops. In a year it is a perfect miniature oak. Whe the roots cease to grow, the ends are varnished over, and the orange is embedded in a pot or vase. The tree becomes more gnarled and stunted every year, and is trained to whatever shape is desired." What other attempts were made? |