🌳 Prune Like a Pro with Kiyonal!
The New Bonsai Pruning Cutting Sealer is a premium 100g paste made in Japan, designed specifically for sealing cuts on bonsai trees after pruning and grafting. It dries quickly, is easy to apply, and comes with official English instructions, ensuring a seamless experience for bonsai enthusiasts.
S**E
excellent
this stuff works great.
L**A
Really liked it!
I'm now maintaining my Crimson Queen Japanese Maple. I do light trimming every now and then, to maintain its tree-like form, not the mushroom. This helped in sealing the big cuts especially during spring pruning. Quality is really good. No mess and color is perfect! A very good value for the money and size is about right.
D**I
Paste
Great product
V**C
Not bad
I never knew this product existed. I found it and really like how I use it around my plants and trees. I don’t know how it will perform as the weather changes and time goes by
A**R
Small format makes it easy to spread with a finger.
I'm getting ready to do some serious tree (not bonsai) pruning and wanted to make sure my plants thrive. After researching, I decided to buy this product although there are some cheaper options out there. It looked easy to spread especially for smaller cuts. Just used it today to seal some small maple tree branch cuts and it spread beautifully. The light green is completely inconspicuous. I have a very good feeling about this product and look forward to using it on some larger pruning cuts.
O**E
Great paste!
This wound paste really helped my tree! had a decent wound on a tree to do a bark test and it cured it in no time. I also use it on branch ends when pruning and it works like a charm.
I**N
perfect for sealing bonsai cuts
Easy to use. Perfect for bonsai.
M**S
Sure helped my 'rescued' Japanese Maple heal!
I got a Shishigashira one day last year that was languishing in the late summer heat on clearance at the local garden center. My first such endeavor, though I had been keeping an eye out for a nice maple for a while, but this was soooo cheap I figured why not...Well, as it turned out, it didn't just need a little shade and care like I assumed; it was suffering from pseudomonas syringae (I'm pretty sure), probably from being stressed from the 100 degree heat and extreme winds we'd had. I almost threw it out, since I didn't want it to spread to other plants. But I tried a last-ditch effort, cutting out the cankers with a pruning knife and getting rid of anything that looked remotely infected, covering the wounds with Kiyonal, and treating with a systemic...And this spring, it started making a comeback! No infection present in the new branching, leaves or buds! The canker hole wounds have healed, except for a particularly large one, which is still covered with the Kiyonal and closing.Once you work with the product a couple of times, you get the hang of it. It's interesting in that it's not thick like the black kind in the metal or aerosol can (which has its uses), it's more... 'oozey', yet sticky, like a mixture of glue and toothpaste. It's not always easy to get it to stay where you put it if a wound is slick and gravity is working against you, but I like that it's a bit gentler and keeps things more flexible and wet while they heal, if that makes sense. I use it on roses and flowers too where the other stuff would be overkill. I bring alcohol wipes or a bottle of alcohol and towels (which you should have anyway for your pruning tools so you don't spread disease) and wipe my gloved finger off, then wipe the tube opening after squeezing some on my finger, which helps keep the messy cap issues to a minimum.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
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