Swindon bonsai show 2014

A great blog post from Andy from the Swindon Show looking mostly at Shohin trees. Getting me in the mood for Willowbog 🙂

andysshohin's avatarAndys shohin bonsai

The swindon show has become over the years a real must view bonsai show on the UK bonsai calendar, and while the lighting this year had been replaced in the main hall for crisp white light giving superb conditions. The trees where of a superb quality, while all sizes where on show I was drawn to the shohin trees.

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Very nice cork bark elm without as many have the inverse taper.

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Another but this one has that classic inverse, but has good ramification.

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Hornbeam size wise this is just outside shohin.

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This one was interesting, while a nice idea I feel for me it was too large for the pagoda as the framework broke lines of the tree.

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This chojubai is a favourite for me for shohin bonsai.

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Here are a few of the accents that caught my eye.

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Nothing quite says spring like snow drops.

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This is a rare…

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A step in the right direction.

Getting excited 🙂

A visit to Shunka-en

brendenstudio's avatarbrendenstudio

The second stop on our garden tour was to Kunio Kobayashi’s bonsai garden, Shunka-en. Located just outside Tokyo (and a fair drive from Kimura’s garden) it was begun by his father some seventy years ago. The garden was the largest I’d seen that day and very impressive. We were greeted by trees before we ever set foot in the garden–they were even on the roof!

Roof garden

Once inside the gate, we were ushered past familiar, famous old junipers and pines to the indoor Tokonoma display area by our guide, whose name I forgot, but has been an apprentice there for two years now and speaks excellent English.

Our guide

The first display featured an Ume, or Japanese flowering plum, one of the first trees to flower in early spring:

Ume

The next display featured a Japanese black pine with a cascading branch and the elements of display suggesting water as the black pine grows…

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Swindon 2014

BonsaiBry's avatarBONSAI WALES

Here we have it… Swindon 2014.

Up early with the lark, well, the kids!! Snack Bag packed ready for my 3hr drive down to the Swindon Winter Image Show.20140224-084541.jpgfinally arriving around 10.45am I parked right next to Mike Joneswhom I bought a pot from via EBF. So that went straight into the boot. It actually took me 20min to get in to see any trees! With so many bonsai friends greeting me at the door 😉 it’s surprising how many people recognise an avatar photograph 😉20140224-085044.jpg20140224-085054.jpgThe quality of the display is very very high!! Traders all doing excellent business throughout the day!
I have to commend the council in their upgrade to the building. It felt very welcoming and the new light was a joy to work with in takin photographs. Folks are posting directly and not having to spend hours in Photoshop tweaking each pic.

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The longest journey begins with but a single step !

Shohin Ivy Repot

Another recent repot, this time an Ivy that I collected on a shingle Beach  back in April 2011 and air layered off the apex  in May 2012 removing the layer in August 2012. Loads of movement and character. Sadly the photos don’t capture the half of it.

This is the old training pot and it’s new one, it’s Chinese and the stamp says ‘evergreen’.

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This photo from last year shows the movement better.

Building ramification

Brian VF's avatarNebari Bonsai

Trees grow from the tips, gaining mass behind them. In bonsai the goal is to control how the tips grow (shape and balance) and manage how they gain the mass along the way. We use that growth in many ways; building mass to make branches bigger, to make entire parts of the tree bigger, or to put the finishing touches in the form of ramification.

The “clip and grow” term is used to describe letting a branch grow until it has 5 or more leaves, then trimming it back to one or two. This is performed during the growing season. Each node has a dormant bud where the leaf stem attaches to the branch, which can be signaled to grow when the branch is trimmed back. A dormant bud is circled in red below:

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Grow the branch to 5 or more nodes (leaves):

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Trim it back to 2:

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Dormant buds…

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February meeting

twinsrat bonsai's avatarMunster Bonsai Club

We just want remind that next club meeting is going to be on Friday, 21/02/2014 at 8 pm in Blackrock National Hurling Club. All very welcome. Do not forgot bring some of yours trees for the critique and workshop.

We will see then.  

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A Jaunt to Japan

brendenstudio's avatarbrendenstudio

It came about almost accidentally, this trip to Japan; I was talking with a friend sometime last fall about my wish to go there and take in the Kokufu Show, the biggest bonsai event of the year held in Tokyo. He said he’d been there once with his wife and thought about returning…as the conversation wore on, it was clear to see we were in accord and plans were made. If you had asked me a year ago if this would be the year I’d be doing this, my answer would have been ‘probably not’ 😉  It turns out this year was a double show; opening week would be one set of trees, which were changed out on the weekend and a completely new set of trees were exhibited during the second week. The general public was not allowed to photograph the exhibit, so no photos of trees from the…

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Kokufu Show, Friends, Massive Snowstorm…

crataegus's avatarMichael Hagedorn

…the usual Japan bonsai experience in February.

I’m writing this in the snow-socked city of Nagano, 6 hours after my plane left from Narita Airport on the other side of Honshu. Waved vaguely in the direction of my apprentice Bobby Curttright, who enviously left Shinji Suzuki’s garden several days before I did and had a nice time visiting museums in slushy, but not ground-to-a-halt, Tokyo. Here we had over two feet of snow in less than 24 hours, much more in the mountains, and stopping the Shinkansen, bullet train, in its tracks.

This is why they held the winter Olympics here in 1998: Snow is likely.

But there is no snow in this post… at this point in our trip, we had no idea what was coming. Come to think of it, there are no photos of the Kokufu show either, where photos are not allowed (we have to wait…

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