Source material: 2017, May 06





I recently took a field trip with my plant identification course around Washington's cascades on both the west and east sides. Naturally, I had my eyes out for natural bonsai material the whole trip. One unexpected discovery (to me anyway) was Antelope bitterbrush - Purshia tridentata - a non-thorny member of the rose family with small leaves, small white or yellow flowers, and juniper-esque bark and deadwood (it seems to be one of the unusual broadleaf but hardwood exceptions, like olive or buttonwood). The location I found them was an eastern cascade rocky hillside that was ravaged by wildfire 20 years ago, however, the species exists widely in relatively dry, mountainous areas across the western United States.

A nice mountain view of the dry, eastern Washington side of the Cascades.

The temperate rainforests of western Washington are too covered with greenery to see any rocks usually. The rainforest areas are not a probable place to find bonsai material.

Purshia specimens that were claimed by the wildfire are still there on that hillside, hence my conclusion that their wood may have unusually dense or rot-resistant wood. All the living specimens there were spawned in the aftermath of the fire and are younger and less spectacular than the corpses, but I am hoping they will be promising subjects to practice collecting the species. I could find only Many hard, bleached white corpses of olderspecimens that were claimed by the wildfire are still there on that hillside, hence my conclusion that their wood may have unusually dense or rot-resistant wood. All the living specimens there were spawned in the aftermath of the fire and are younger and less spectacular than the corpses, but I am hoping they will be promising subjects to practice collecting the species. I could find only one online discussion on using this native species for bonsai. I'll confess that makes me not the first one to notice their potential, but I'll gladly utilize the knowledge of others instead of undergoing entirely my own trial and error - the discussion warned me the species relies mostly on long-running taproots (with few fine roots close to the trunk, where the root ball we collect would remain), making it difficult to get a collected specimen to survive without some preparation in the field for a year. I hope to analyze the root systems of smaller specimens in this original area before searching for an area with older specimens that were not killed by the wildfire.

Below you will see my documentation of the unusual species. I hope in the future I can provide more updates on using the species, but that might be years away. If you have any knowledge to share on it, please let me know!





I was having difficulty with image layouts in blogger being both compatible for mobile and desktop viewing, so temporarily I will use imgur slideshows until I find a better solution. I'm certainly open to suggestions on the matter.

The ponderosa pine on the top of the rocky cliff may be a good bonsai subject. I'll come back to inspect it with better hiking tools.