Club Show – 2017
57th Annual Show
The Kusamura Bonsai Club hosted their 57th Annual Show on the weekend of April 21 & April 22, 2017. Hundreds of people visited our show and watched the demos on Saturday (Jonas Dupuich) and Sunday (Gordon Deeg and Sandy Vrooman and Marsha Mekisich and Sean Morris). We hope you enjoyed our show. All trees were part of the benefit drawing at the end of the program.
Thanks to club member Sabrina Huang for her professional photography expertise. We’d like to share a pointer to some of her work –
Sabrina Huang Photography (San Francisco)
Medium-to-Large Sized Bonsai
In our club most bonsai fall into the Medium (10 to 24″) or Large (> than 24″) categories. Smaller sized bonsa are called Shohin. There are also very large to enormous bonsai (up to 80″ tall) but we don’t show those at this show. If you’re curious how anything so large can be a bonsai, the answer is simple. Any tree grown in a pot can be a bonsai – if it has been styled. But few bonsai outside the Japanese Imperial collection are that large.
Banyan
Black Pine
Bougainvillea - 2
Bougainvilliea
Coast Live Oak
Ficus
Japanese Maple Group
Japanese Maple
Juniperus Procumbens
Olive
San Jose Juniper
Shimpaku Juniper
Trident Maple
Virginian or Eastern Red Cedar - 2
Virginian or Eastern Red Cedar- 3
Virginian or Eastern Red Cedar
Shohin
Shohin are smaller sized bonsai, between 3″ and 8″ tall.
Azalea Shohin
Black Pine Shohin
Black Pine Shohin
Black Pine Shohin
Black Pine Shohin
Boston Ivy Shohin
Boston Ivy Shohin
Boston Ivy Shohin
Cotoneaster Shohin
Crabapple Shohin
Elm Shohin
Elm Shohin
Elm Shohin
Euonymus Shohin
Ficus Maricopa Shohin
Ficus Shohin
Ginkgo Shohin
Grape Shohin
Grape Shohin
Japanese Maple Shohin
Japanese Maple Shohin
Needle Juniper Shohin
Olive Shohin
Olive Shohin
Olive Shohin
Olive Shohin
Porcelain Berry Shohin
Portulacaria Shohin
Redwood Shohin
Scheffluara Shohin
Shimpaku Juniper Shohin
Shimpaku Juniper Shohin
Shohin Group (Black Pine top, Olive, Maple, Azalea, Unknown)
Shohin Group (Shimpaku Juniper Top, Hinoki Cypress Middle, Ivy and Unknown)
Shohin Group (White Pine and Cryptomeria)
White Pine Shohin