When I started bonsai I bought three Ficus benjamina "Wiandi" trees because they look bonsai"ish", a Mallsai without any training because they grow contorted without any help.
This is a typical plant sold by nurseries:
While trying to grow them into bonsai I realized that they can not easily being forced into something I envisaged for them:
-They never back bud  where I want them to, sometimes they don't even back bud at the last leaf but two, three leaves back!
-The
 taper of this trees trunks are horrible, they thicken the trunk where 
they want to! Where the branches enter the trunk there are sometimes 
horrible swellings!
-There are no signs of a nice nebari, one or two thick roots is all you see!
-Defoliating kills branches and leaf reduction after the defoliating is not worth the trouble!
-You cant bend branches, they snap right off!
-Wires leave marks very quickly.
-Nodes are long, so ramification is a problem!
-Working on the lower trunk(some slits to try and get thickening) my one tree rotted!
-They grow sloooooow!
and
They cant take the cold!
I have done a Google picturesearch to get some nice examples of finished Ficus Wiandii bonsai....but I could only found one!
(Owner of above tree unknown.)
Why do I keep them?  
Because they are strange little trees!
The history of the variety:
"The present invention comprises a new and distinct cultivar of Ficus 
benjamina.  The varietal denomination of the new cultivar is `Wiandi`.
The
 new variety was discovered as a mutation in a controlled planting of 
Ficus benjamina `Natasha` in a greenhouse in Aalsmeer, The Netherlands. 
 The new cultivar was discovered as a whole plant mutation and was 
isolated in a glass house in Aalsmeer, Holland.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The
 new variety is a mutation of the variety Ficus benjamina `Natasha` and 
differs significantly in growth habit and appearance from its parent.  
Whereas Ficus benjamina `Natasha` exhbits a vertical, upright growth 
pattern which reaches a height of one meter in approximately nine months,
 `Wiandi` will take approximately two years to reach this height.  Also,
 the growth pattern of `Wiandi` is irregular and the growth form is 
substantially horizontal, or laterally dominant with zig-zag 
pattern between internodal spacing.  Although growth of the new variety 
will eventually progress vertically, it does so much slower than its 
parent, as indicated above.
The term "Zig-Zag" is an acceptable 
botanical term denoting a botanical growth form.  As used herein, the 
new variety, `Wiandi,` maintains a decumbant growth pattern in addition 
to its irregular branching.  Its growth habit is horizontally dominant as
 opposed to apically dominant Ficus varieties like the parent `Natasha`,
 and Ficus benjamina.  Its branches take irregular angular turns between
 leaf internodes and internode distance is also irregular.  Lengths 
between leaf internodes on thesame branch have been measured at 7 mm, 11
 mm, 18 mm and 20 mm.  These length differences do not appear to fall 
into any pattern along the branch, but are observed at random.  For 
instance, internode length does not necessarily increase or 
decrease laterally along a branch.  In addition, it is very rare to find a
 successive internode that does not angle off from its preceding 
internode.  Growth does not continue along a relatively straight line as
 it does with `Natasha`.  Without manipulation or pruning, it is not 
uncommon to see angulation of successive internodes as great as 
90.degree..  Greater angulation of branching has been achieved or 
induced by pruning of the apical branch tip.  With pruning, angulation 
of the growth between internodes has been observed as great as 
150.degree..  `Wiandi` also has been observed to throw multiple ariel 
roots (branch prop type), particularly when grown under hot humid 
contitions such as in Homestead, Fla., during the months of January to 
September.  In Florida, it has been observed that the leaf size increases
 during the warmer months, as does Ficus `Natasha`, and then decreases 
during the cooler months.  Leaf sizes stated previously indicate the 
smaller leaf size cycle which is most typical of the plant."
( http://www.patentgenius.com/patent/PP9207.html)
I bought this nursery plant in 2009:
The tree April 2011:May 2012:
July 2012:
April 2014:
Oktober 2019:
Another one - picture 2009:
The same tree April 2014:
Another one:
A forest/setting in the making:
2009
2012
For the fun of it:
April 2014 - needs a bit of work!
This was not my plan for this one - the tree has styled itself like this:
 Another one that will have to be chopped summer 2014:





















How do you start the forest bonsai?
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