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Here is my original tigerbark ficus / ficus microcarpa bonsai. I've been styling this as a traditional upright style. This video looks at the last 7 years of history on it and how it got to where it is today. From Chat GPT: Fun Facts – Ficus microcarpa (aka Chinese Banyan) 1. It’s basically the Chuck Norris of bonsai trees. You can prune it, defoliate it, repot it mid-summer, forget to water it once or twice—and it’ll bounce back like it bench presses adversity for breakfast. 2. It grows everywhere. Native to Southeast Asia, but now naturalized in Florida, Hawaii, Australia, India, the Middle East, and even cracks in sidewalks. It’s the botanical version of that guy who shows up uninvited but ends up DJing your party. 3. It's a master of aerial roots. Given humidity and warmth, this thing throws out aerial roots like spaghetti at a food fight. These can become trunks over time—great for creating banyan-style bonsai. 4. It’s not the same as Ficus benjamina. People mix them up all the time. Ficus benjamina is more finicky, drops leaves when you sneeze near it, and isn’t nearly as bonsai-friendly. Microcarpa is the true workhorse. 5. Its leaves shrink easily. With proper pruning and light, microcarpa’s leaves reduce beautifully—sometimes to the size of your pinky nail. Perfect for believable small-scale bonsai. 6. It has a latex weapon system. Cut it, and it bleeds white sap (latex), which helps seal wounds and deter pests. Also mildly toxic—don't eat it, and wash your hands. 7. It's been trained as bonsai for centuries. Ficus microcarpa has been used in Chinese and Taiwanese bonsai cultivation for hundreds of years. It’s one of the most widely grown tropical bonsai species in the world. 8. It tolerates apartment life. Poor light? No problem. Dry air? Still thrives. It's one of the few bonsai trees that does well indoors, year-round—just keep it near a window. 9. You can fuse trunks together. The species accepts approach grafts and trunk fusions easily, letting artists create thick, dramatic trunks in just a few years using saplings or cuttings. 10. It’s immortal (almost). Okay, not literally. But some Ficus microcarpa bonsai in Asia are over 100 years old and still thriving. Given proper care, this tree might outlive you, your kids, and your grandkids.