Sophora prostrata Little Baby
By Orgratis
- 24 Oct, 2009
- 3 likes
Tiny teardrop leaves on crooked zigzagging stems tugged at my heart & begged to come home from Forest Farm (where I was applying for a job). Gets about 4-6 ft tall, and bushy, although I like the bonsai effect. AKA Kōwhai is the Maori word for yellow, which in turn gives the tree the name due to the colo(u)r of the flowers in Spring.
Comments on this photo
Thanks, David. I'm struggling to figure out how to load photos in the right place in the right order with the right tags! Luckily my daughter's helping. Haven't yet found the macro on the camera to get really sharp detail, but tried my best in another pix. Isn't the form fabulous?!
24 Oct, 2009
Impossible to load a series of pics of a plant, or garden, development, until you have all pics first, I find. Then, you have to load them in "reverse" order, to get a sequence, which is pointless, really, as most folks start with the most recent pics. I file mine in my "Garden" section, in "albums", and label, so they do end up in some kind of order.
Tagging becomes easier once you start. As soon as you start typing in the tag box, anything similar you have entered b4 will appear in a drop-down box, and you can click on one -saves a whole lot of time! Think you should add "Sophora" to your tags for this one - just click on "add Tags, type in, and submit).
Yes, love the shape of this, as you say, very Bonzai! in appearance. Would love it to stay like this!! :-))
24 Oct, 2009
Pictures by all members
202806 of 302344
What else?
View photos by Orgratis
Featured on: bonsai
This photo is of species Sophora prostrata Little Baby.
See who else has plants in genus Sophora.
Members who like this photo
-
Gardening with friends since
24 Jun, 2007 -
Gardening with friends since
23 Mar, 2008
-
Sophora Japonica
£17.50 at Burncoose -
Sophora Macrocarpa
£14.00 at Burncoose -
Sophora Davidii
£14.00 at Burncoose -
Sophora Tetraptera
£13.00 at Burncoose
I really like its shape as it is now, also. Thanks for the info on it. Look forward to seeing this in bloom.
24 Oct, 2009