Lighting: | Likes a bright position (1000 Lux). Most sources recommend only about an hour of direct sunlight daily, although success has been reported growing it in a sunny position all day. |
Temperature: | Ehretia prefers temperatures between 60-72F in winter, although occasional dips into the forties produce no ill effects.. In the summer, most books recommend protection from extreme heat, although the plant has been successfully grown in sweltering Texas weather. Ehretia does not like draughts. |
Watering: | Keep well watered, reducing watering only slightly in winter. Never allow Ehretia to stand in water, or allow the soil to dry out completely. Frequent misting will discourage spider mites, but will apparently encourage mealy bugs. Choose your poison! Ehretia anacua, a Texas native, is more resistant to draughts, and likes to dry out a bit between waterings, but should not be allowed to become bone dry. |
Feeding: | Feeding: Every two weeks during growth, every four-six weeks in winter. Use bonsai food or half strength plant food. Do NOT use Miracid. Fukien tea does not like to be overfed; Lesniewicz suggests watering well before feeding to avoid root burn. Feeding weekly has been reported with success - I would guess that frequency of feeding can be increased as long as the strength of the food is kept diluted. |
Repotting: | Every 2-3 years, in early spring. Reduce water after root pruning. Bottom heat helps stimulate new root growth. Use basic soil mix. Ehretia anacua is a faster grower than other Ehretia species, and may need yearly repotting in hot climates. It may be repotted spring-fall, but should be defoliated in the heat of summer. Beware of snapping thick roots - they are more brittle than they appear. |
Styling: |
Prune new shoots after six to eight leaves have
appeared. The leaves are tiny enough that leaf pruning should
not be necessary. Can be wired any time during the growing
season, but it is generally styled through pruning alone. Wire
should not be left on over three months. Its small leaves and
fine branch ramification make it ideal for miniature bonsai. Ehretia anacua does not ramify as well, and its stiff branches make wiring dangerous. It has a strong tendency towards apical growth, and needs constant pinching of topmost branches. It buds back readily on old wood, and is suitable for any style, although broom and literati are especially nice. |
Propagation: | By seed or softwood cuttings in spring or summer. Cuttings root more readily if given bottom heat. |
Pests etc.: | Aphids, scale, chlorosis, mealy-bugs, snails. Red spider mites find this plant a special treat, and will attack it over any other plants in the area. Unfortunately, Fukien tea is very sensitive to insecticides, and Diazinon will kill the tree. Use the weakest insecticide possible that will address a particular problem, or if possible, employ predator insects. Will drop leaves if underwatered. Overwatering results in yellow, sickly leaves. It is quite sensitive to sudden changes in temperature and lighting. Ehretia anacua is more resistant to pests, with leaf miners being the only reported problem. |
>15-40' with a straight, fluted trunk having thick, furrowed >dark brown bark. The leaves are rounded, dark green, and >extremely rough, like sandpaper. The tree is listed as evergreen >but colder temperatures will cause them to shed their 3" leaves. >Depending on rainfall, the tree will flower, with clusters of >white blooms, from early spring through late fall. The flowers >are followed by yellow to red, two-seeded berries.
Ehretia buxifolia (also called Carmona microphylla, Ehretia microphylla): Fukien tea, Philippine tea - Well loved for bonsai due to its tiny, shiny green leaves, tiny white flowers throughout the year, and red beries.
Ehretia dicksonii - a deciduous species of Ehretia. Rare as bonsai.
Ehretia thrysiflora - Another deciduous species of Ehretia which deserves wider use in bonsai.
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I have a large specimen, approximately 1 1/2 in in diameter, which is kept indoors. It has recently acquired a problem which has been identified as oyster scale. I have treated it with ultra thin oil and insecticides, however, they return two days after treatments. 75% of the leaves are now gone. There is some new growth, but it does not keep up with the old leaf loss. Can anyone help me?
Thank you for the helpful guidelines for my Fukien Tea. I recently purchased my bonsai and had no idea how to care for it. I am delighted to have found such simple and helpful instructions. I am now able to nurture my new bonsai to a long and healthy life! Thanks again. Sylvia
================================================================= Date: Wed, 11 Sep 1996 13:41:47 -0500 From: "Matthew L. Ward"Keep up the good work! I'll send you info on my Chamaecyparis, Eugenia, Ficus, Malpighia and .... Hey wait! Do you have a FAQ for Fukien Tea?!?!?! ("Carmona microphylla" or "Ehretia buxifolia")? Would you like one? And please, since this is a compliation from many online rec.arts.bonsai postings, give the whole group credit. Anyhow, as I learn more, I'll email you and you can add it to the FAQ. ============================================================================ Fukien Tea --------------------- Carmona microphylla or Ehretia buxifolia Native to southern China, the Fukien tea is a large shrub or small tree which lends itself very nicely to bonsai because of its slow compact growth habit. Three varieties are commonly seen, referred to simply as the small, medium, and large leaf Fukien teas. Small white flowers are produced in the spring, which may be followed by berries that ripen from green to red. This is an excellent indoor plant. The only caution seems to be that spider mites find this plant delicious and will attack it over other, nearby, bonsai. Basic care ---------------------