A profesor and his ‘tiny’ trees

GARDENING2104A

Ahmedali Hebatullah during an interview at his home in Nairobi on April 21,2021. He nurtures and sells bonsai trees. NMG PHOTO 

What you need to know:

  • Bonsai trees are miniature versions of real-life trees.
  • Exceptionally detailed, with every prune and bend Mr Hebatullah’s bonsai trees are specially crafted to draw people in aesthetically and elicit in them feelings of relaxation and rejuvenation.

What piques your interest when you look at a tree? Is it the size or colour of its flower? For Ahmedali Hebatullah, who lives Nairobi, it is the branches and roots; how they look like, how they are growing, and to which direction.

To him, trees are living works of art. From them, he draws inspiration that he applies to his art of making Bonsai trees.

Bonsai trees are miniature versions of real-life trees.

Exceptionally detailed, with every prune and bend Mr Hebatullah’s bonsai trees are specially crafted to draw people in aesthetically and elicit in them feelings of relaxation and rejuvenation.

“I’ve been creating bonsai trees for two years now,” Mr Hebatullah says. “But my love for the craft is many years old.”

GARDENING2104l

Over 100 trees

The professor at the Aljamea-tus-Saifiyah Arabic Academy in Nairobi’s Karen grew up mingling with trees, plants and flowers in orchards and nurseries. While at it, he stumbled upon bonsais. Showing interest, his mother bought him a book. Years later, he is putting his knowledge to use.

His backyard is an Eden of bonsais with more than 100 trees. Some are growing in clay pots, others in training boxes, alone or as miniature forests. Some are growing over rocks. Some have flowers cascading down while others are growing leaning towards one side. The “wind-swept style”, he called it.

As he shows me around, he does so with passion. The nature-loving professor has miniaturised jacaranda, jade, acacia, olive, sausage and fig trees among others.

He spends an hour each day in his workshop and watches a YouTube video daily to sharpen his craft.

He shows me a Desert Hibiscus that he is propagating through air layering. It is “doing very well.” Air layering is a method of propagating bonsais where a propagated part of the tree continues to receive water and nutrients from the parent tree as it slowly develops its roots.

Once the roots are fully grown, the propagated plant is cut off and transplanted. Mr Hebatullah sources his trees from his garden and nurseries. He looks for three things while choosing one for miniaturisation. The thickness of its stem, its shape and the size of its leaves. Small leaves are preferred.

Bonsai is about small leaves and making the tree old through bends created by wiring. A large trunk is ideal for this because it adds age to the bonsai tree. The tree must be above three years old. As for the shape, it must be aesthetically pleasing.

At his sunroom

The oldest trees he has used are 15 years old. A pink-flowered jade (Crassula ovata), the umbrella tree (Schefflera abricola) and a Chinese banyan (Ficus microcarpa) whose roots, he crafted to grow over a rock. These are the welcoming displays at his sunroom, where he hosts visitors.

Before working on a tree, he studies it to understand how it grows while it is in a training box.

GARDENING2104r

His tools of trade are few. Differently sized aluminium wires for the bending, a pair of gardening scissors and sheers for pruning small and large branches respectively, pliers for wire cutting and bending, a chopstick and the tree itself.

Wires are “the paintbrush of bonsais” but should be removed if they start eating into the tree. The tree’s main roots are removed leaving only the hairy, fibrous roots. This is because, with a reduction in the size of the tree, big roots are unnecessary. However, in the case of a cypress, he maintains a rootball.

The tree is thereafter repotted in a well-draining clay pot filled with river sand, compost pumice rock in a 5:3:2 ratio. Once a month, he adds NPK fertiliser.

“We use river sand because normal soil holds a lot of water leading to root rot. The chopstick is my hoe. I use it to till the soil,” he explains, adding that the fibrous roots are adequate to absorb nutrients for the now dwarfed tree.

Compost provides nutrients and the pumice rocks are a soil amendment. The tree is then left to grow. Styling may be done as it grows. The tree can be repotted every two years or have its roots trimmed to maintain the same post size.

Pots are a crucial detail. Mr Hebatullah sources his pots from South Africa, China and India since such are difficult to find in Kenya.

The prices

While pricing his bonsais for sale, he factors in the cost of the pot, time and age of the tree. The small leaf golden jade costs Sh14,500. Other bonsais cost as much as Sh40,000.

He sells his creations through his social media page, Bonsais R Us. Covid-19 has proved to be a peak season for him as people rediscovered gardening pleasures. He also does online training on the art of bonsai trees.

While the art of bonsai making started in China, it has found roots in Kenya, as more people keep bonsai as masterpieces in their homes.

Should you want to venture into bonsai making, “Arm yourself with knowledge, be passionate and patient. Don’t despair when plants die. It’s normal. Finally, remember it’s a partnership. Do your part faithfully and leave the rest to God,” Mr Hebatullah says.

PAYE Tax Calculator

Note: The results are not exact but very close to the actual.