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Robert transforms an ordinary Western Red Cedar into a tanuki style bonsai. Our friend Brian got these from his friend where these cedars have been eaten by elk for many years in the yard. Brian thought they would make a good forest since he had two, but it wasn't quite enough to make a proper forest. So Robert studies the tree and decides that a tanuki style would be best. What is a tanuki and why is this a bonsai style? A Tanuki is a Japanese racoon dog, however, in Japanese folklore they are more than that. Spelled Bake-Danuki (Tanuki), they are a yokai creature that can shapeshift into other beings or possess humans. This is why deadwood bonsai or attaching a driftwood to a bonsai piece is called a tanuki style because the deadwood is "possessing" the tree or shapeshifting into a tree. It allows for a tree to look drastically different. A seemingly young tree can look hundreds of years old when done properly.