STOLEN BONSAI – Bristol, UK

Yesterday this Blackthorn bonsai was stolen from a collection near Bristol, south west.

A full description of the tree can be found at http://snsyamadori.co.uk/blackthorn then scroll down to Blackthorn 5.

Please be on the look out for this bonsai.

There is a healthy reward for anyone who can give any information which leads to the return of the tree.

Highs and lows

I had a lok at the min/max temperature in my old Poly Tunnel today. I haven’t reset it in about 2 weeks. It was interesting to see the variation in there. from -3°c to 27°c. Mild Sunny days a few weeks back reached 27 in the tunnel and last night was -3. I have reset the gauge and plan to keep a close eye on it. I also want to put one in the other tunnel to compare.

Tim Cahill Hates Bonsai!!

If you’ve seen the new advert on TV for the FIFA 2012 game, you will notice Tim Cahill [Everton] complaining about his unwanted gift of a bonsai! The price is for the game not the tree.

Firstly, Whoever gave him the tree might have weeded it first!

Secondly, He should keep it. It would give him something to do while he’s warming the physio table.:-) Blue nose!!!!

Breaking 50,000 Views

Today my blog broke the 50,000 views mark.

To be honest, I’m absolutely flabbergasted by this. I started this 10 months ago as an online diary, I never thought that my ramblings would be of interest.

I thought I would share some of the other stats with you out of interest and it will allow me to mark the moment.

I have had visitors from 92 countries, the latest being Cambodia.

I have made 559 posts averaging 1.7 posts per day.

Nearly 1000 comments have been left.

My busiest day saw 587 visitors.

I have 58 WordPress Followers.

My most popular pages have been:

Bonsai 360

Escallonia Progression

Airlayering a Hawthorn

Chuhin Japanese maple

Bonsai Bloggers 

My most popular posts have been:

This is what a £823,000 Bonsai Looks Like

Willowbog Collection

Many thanks to those who have referred others to me.

My Top Referrers have been:

Kintall

Centrobonsaitenerife

Internet Bonsai Club

Facebook

Wee Trees Bonsai Forum

My most clicked Links have been:

Nibonsai.co.uk

Peter Tea Bonsai 

Bjorvala Bonsai Studio

Crataegus Bonsai

I don’t share all this out of ego, more out of interest to me and hopefully to you. It may also help other bloggers out there see what people find of interest. I’ll maybe do this again if I ever hit the 100,000 mark. Wonder if that’ll take 10 months.

I’ll probably ease off the posts over Christmas. Not much happening on the bonsai front this time of year. I’ll spend a little time updating the pages and perhaps adding a few Case Studies etc.

Thank you to everyone out there who has been following my posts since February 6th. It’s been a mixed bag of bonsai, both mine and friends. There has been plenty of photos showing my walks. I’m sure some skip this but I know others love a look at Northern Ireland, so I’ll keep them coming.

I’m always trying to think of other things to share. If you have any ideas, please comment and let me know. If anyone out there want a reciprocal link to their bonsai site, just let me know.

Thanks again

Ian [bonsai eejit]

They’re Back!!!

Why do people buy these bloody things!!!

Spotted this one in a clothes shop the other day. The usual Christmas crap. £15 for a plastic pot, a bag of soil and a few pine seeds. I give up!

Virtual Bonsai

I have been asked by a few people about virtual bonsai. I like to use photoshop to try different pots on my trees, add foliage or remove a branch. I Did an article for the club website a few years ago about how I did this. For anyone who uses Photoshop already, this won’t interest you. However, if you are new to the software, it should help. The screen shots are from an older version of Photoshop than I use now but the basic layout is still the same. I have reproduced this article below

Creating Virtual Bonsai

Virtual Bonsai is fancy title for changing or creating bonsai images with computer software. This article will hopefully help the uninitiated get involved with this wonderful way of making decisions with your bonsai without having to lift a pair of Branch Cutters.

Dan Barton was one of the first to start using computer software for projecting his ideas for a trees future. Several articles were published in the UK Bonsai Magazine. (Issues 43 –45.) My own introduction to virtuals was on the Internet Bonsai Club Gallery in 2000. I was amazed with the virtual results created from some of the trees I posted to Gallery. I was instantly hooked and set out to learn how to master this very helpful tool.

Getting started

Computer

The most obvious requirement is a computer. Nothing too fancy though, most home computers are quite adequate. Any computer currently on the market will more than suffice.

Software

Now you need the software programme that will allow you to alter the Bonsai images. There are lots of these on the market. Most PC’s come with Microsoft Paint, which is a basic programme and will do most things you require it to do and the beauty of it is that you probably already have it. I personally use Adobe Photoshop or Photoshop Elements a smaller and cheaper version without some of the frills. Photoshop is a proven leader in the field and will do everything you need, but don’t take my word for it, try a few programmes out. You will find lots of free demo versions with computer magazines. When you find one you like, stick with it.

Getting the bonsai into the computer?

Scanners

A scanner is a great way to get your hard copy photograph into the computer. I personally scan all my Bonsai Photos and keep them on Disk for future use.

Digital Camera

A digital Camera is the quickest and easiest way to get a bonsai image into the computer. It is an expensive  outlay but you will save on getting all those unwanted photos developed. The main benefit is that you can snap the tree in the garden and then pop it straight into the computer and work on it. No waiting for the photos to come back from the Chemist.

Internet

Another way to get bonsai photos to play with is to download them from a website or Gallery. These won’t be your trees but you will learn the same lessons as you would with your own. Why not go to the IBC Gallery and get some photos. When you have played with them you can put them back on the Gallery and see what everyone thinks. A great learning experience.

The following are the main ways you can use computer software to assist with the decision making and styling of Bonsai.

Pot selection

We all have trees with which we struggle to find a perfect pot. You think you have the right one but a year later you are looking for a replacement. Now you can put your tree into as many pots as you like and compare them before making a decision on which pot to buy. You can also share the images with others to see if they agree with your choice, they rarely do!

Irish Trees and Towns

As it’s pissing it down today and I have absolutely no photos to share with you, I thought that for today’s post I would share an article written by a club member a few years back.

It was written by one of the founding members of our society, Victor Corbett. Victor is a fluent Gaelic speakers and had mentioned at a club meeting that many of the place names in Northern Ireland had their meaning linked to trees in the Irish language.  We asked him to write this down for us to share with all our members, and that is what you can read below. For those who follow this blog with a Gaelic background, be it Irish, Scottish or Welsh, I thought you might find it interesting….

Following the very interesting and informative discussion on Native Trees at a Society meeting, it occurred to me that where better to identify truly native trees than by understanding the meaning of some of our local place names.

 I’ve always had a general interest in this subject – local descriptive place names are generally derived from the Gaelic language originally spoken in NE Ireland and is still widely spoken today in the Western Isles and West coast mainland of Scotland. After all Scotland got its name and language from a tribe called Scotti which lived in the Dalmade area of North Antrim in the 5th & 6th Centuries. Some of the ‘Scots’ emigrated to Argyll and Isley, ousted by Picts and established a nation and language which still exists today, but enough of the history!

In the Dromara area of Mid-Down where I spent much time among the farming community there was a local hill called Singer’s Mountain – its proper name was Mullaghdrin, meaning the hill-top of Blackthorn, drinn being the Gaelic for Blackthorn. To this day it’s still a tangle of Blackthorn scrub.

Not far away in the opposite direction is the Townland of Aughnaskeagh – the fields of the Hawthorn. Any name containing Skeagh or Skea indicates the presence of Hawthorn, eg. Lisnaskea – the hill fort of Hawthorn.

The Oak is widely referred to in many place names containing Derry from Doire, an Oak tree.Londonderry itself, Edenderry, the hill brow of Oaks, and Deramore in the Malone area of Belfast is derived from Doire Mor, the great Oak that used to exist in the area.

A few others for consideration :-

Alder : Fearna

eg. Cloughfern, the rock of the Alders

Birch : Beithe

eg. Beaghmore, the big Birches.

Rowan : Caorunn

gets its name from the second syllable in the Gaelic name for Mountain Ash.

Yew : An Iubhar,

Pronounced An-your-uh. Easily becomes Newry, also Ballynure.

Holly : Cuileann

eg. Slieve Gullion, Collin Glen.

Willow : Seileaeh

eg. Ballysallagh, the town of the Willows. Willow is often referred to in country areas as the Selly – Very similar to the botanical name Salix.

One tree I can’t identify yet in any place name known to me is the Scots Pine – Giubhais, but if you know of any place name ending in ‘ooish’, you’ve probably located one.

Caledonie, the poetic name for Scotland, I suggest is derived from ‘Coille Donn’, the brown wood, which describes the old Caledonion Pine forest, originally widespread over the Scottish Highlands. Caledon is also a local name in Co. Armagh.

So keep your eyes and ears open and some of our peculiar place names might give you a clue to original locations of native trees. Finally, have you ever given any thought to the place where we hold our meetings? Cregagh, its from Creagach meaning a rocky place and there’s still a Rocky road up the hill there.

 Victor Corbett

Sunrise on Sunday

Took these this morning as I went out the door for my Sunday walk.

As it was very windy with sea spray everywhere on my walk, I kept the camera in the bag. Then, right at the end of the walk, I spotted Alien Spaceships attacking Belfast Harbour!! Well, it looked like something out of Stargate until I spotted the Kite Surfers underneath 🙂

Remember Them….

It’s the 11th Hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of the 11th year.

A special moment in time and history. Lets all remember those on all sides who have lost loved ones in War and conflict.

The following photographs were taken during my Tour of the First World War Battlefields in September 2010. One of the most sobering weeks of my life seeing loss of life on such an incomprehensible scale.

Photographs show memorials to British, Irish, German, Canadian, American, Austrian, French soldiers. And as the headstone says, Sacrificed to the fallacy that War can end War.

Flanders Poppy

True words on a grave of an Irish soldier bearing my family name and he even shared my birthday. He is however no relation. It was a special moment finding and reading this.

The Ulster Tower

German Memorial

Irish Peace Tower

The Somme where the 36th Ulster Division suffered heavy losses Let us remember them.

Dig It!

I bought this folding spade the other day under the pretence that I’ll keep it in the car in case of Winter snow.

My real reason was to add it to my collecting kit bag 🙂

Not bad for £6 🙂