by Jeremy on Fri Apr 10, 2009 8:54 pm
So in my ongoing search for the components to Boon's mix I have made some progress...I finally found Pumice and Lava Rock in this town...WOW...who knew it would be this challenging?
I went to Burnco first. They wanted an arm and a leg for lava and their pieces were enormous. I called every landscaping company in town and none of them had any. Green Gate had lava, but again the price was high and the size was large. Eventually I went up to Golden Acres and found Dutch Secret (I think that's what it is called) -- one litre bags in a usable size (price: not great at $6.00, but better than anything else I've found).
Pumice was exceptionally hard to find. I called landscapers, building suppliers, masonry supplies, pet stores, pool suppliers, landscape suppliers, golf courses, farm suppliers and a number of garden centres -- any place I could think of that might carry pumice. Eventually I contacted Edward's Garden Centre and they said they thought just might have what I was looking for. To my great satisfaction, they did; 4 gallons worth (price: again not cheap, $30.00).
Granite I've got already and charcoal can be purchased in bulk for cheap at Pisces Pet Emporium.
The final ingredient is Akadama. Nobody in town carries it and it is absurdly expensive to order in (35.00 CAD plus shipping for a 1 litre bag).
Whoever may be reading this should justifiably be asking: "Is it really worth it?"
At 35.00 a bag plus 30.00 in shipping it most certainly is not worth it, but it sure would be nice.
I have imported trees from Japan growing in pure Akadama, and their root systems are fantastic and quite frankly far superior to any of my trees growing in the granite, schultz aquatic, river stone and fir bark mix.
Why?
I've been trying to figure this out for some time now.
It seems that it is a combination of it's porous structure that facililitates a cationic exchange capacity which is moderately high at (21 meq/100g), the fact it maintains it's structure under a frequent watering, sunlight and fertilization regemin and most importantly (and least discussed) the fact that it is somewhat soft.
A lot of bonsai growers praise Turface and other "Kittydamas" as superior to akadama for their ability to resist breaking down. Very few take into consideration that a little bit of breakdown might in fact be beneficial. The beautiful thing about akadama is that it maintains its structure under frequent watering (and therefore maintains excellent filtration of air and water) but is soft and porous enough to allow roots to penetrate it.
Many people in North America use fir bark in their mixes (i.e. me) but fir bark is generally very hard and the roots have a heck of time penetrating it. The roots grow around the wood, and the wood is full of tanins and other unfavourable chemicals that make it a less than ideal organic addition to a soil mix. At first I thought these criticisms were unfounded, bonsai purist, nonsense ("Well the Japanese have used akadama for decades, so why use anything else"), but the fact is all of my trees growing in akadama are healthier with much finer and robust roots systems.
Colin Lewis suggests that with the now fashionable, excessively firm and granular mixes, the roots occupy somewhere in the range of 30% of the total potted volume with the rest being occupied by inpenetrable granite, lava, pumice and high fired clay. In softer, akadama based soils the the roots occupy up to 60%. When efficient root systems are are crucial (as they are in bonsai) the merits of akadama become obvious.
But...the price is not right.
So what to do? Compromise I suppose.
I'm going to substitute Schultz Aquatic (or Turface) for akadama in my conifers and use mix of Schultz Aquatic and Sphagnum Peat in my deciduous (keeping my maples moist enough in their fir bark-based mix has been very challenging -- hopefully the peat will help). I don't like the idea of using peat because of the non-renewability and the very high CEC (150 meq/100g) which with the high CEC of the Schultz Aquatic could lead to root burn if I am not careful -- I must remember to flush the soil regularly. The upshot is greater soil stability, less repotting and better cold weather tolerance -- the drawbacks have already been discussed. I'll keep you all posted on the results.
If you have any questions or suggestions on my mix please let me know.
Thanks,
- Jeremy