I dream of getting to Japan to see quality trees like these! It must be amazing to walk down row after row of fantastic bonsai. It must also be frustrating if you can’t afford to buy any 🙂
I dream of getting to Japan to see quality trees like these! It must be amazing to walk down row after row of fantastic bonsai. It must also be frustrating if you can’t afford to buy any 🙂
As usual for a Sunday, I snapped a few pics on my walk today. It was an early start to get down to Gosford Forest Park in Armagh. Here are a few of the trees that caught my eye within the park and on the way back home again.
A big old fella in the open area of the park.

His little mate.

Some of the farmed deer lounging around in the open grassland area.

Some beautiful trees to admire.

A stand of Scots Pine

Old Beech

Tall Fir of some sort.

An ivy choked Larch with very unusual upturned branch tips!

Deadwood on a large Hawthorn.

The previous generation, beautiful in it’s own way.

Moss choked beech.

Two branches that fused many years ago creating a hollow on this old beech.

Same tree, beautiful in the sunlight this morning.

And the beech next door, tree after tree worth admiring.

An old heavy limb that has fallen in the high winds. The top of the branch has ferns growing along it. Using the moss as soil.

I can’t take a walk without getting some fungi in there somewhere.

and a nice nebari to finish off.

Hope you enjoyed the walk.
…. lol and we found some 🙂 Apologies for the movie reference, in an odd mood today.
Phil and I decided to check out a site that we thought might yield a few nice Larch and Spruce to collect. Phil had spotted it near one of his fishing spots up in the Sperrins area in Tyrone. Being vague here but you can understand this 😉 Anyway after a rather long and wet hike over 5 miles on rough ground, we found a small patch of trees that fit our needs.
We hadn’t planned to collect anything today. The whole point of the trip was to find the site and gain permission. The trees were commercially planted but no longer viable for harvest due to some very nice goats and sheep roaming the hills. 🙂 They have stripped the bark on many of the trees causing multiple trunks and shari. The Spruce are to be cleared anyway by cutting off at the base!!
Can you call this yamadori? Not really, they are commercially planted trees and is some cases not even that old. However nature and the elements have done some good work here for us in a short space of time. We don’t have the Alps on our doorstep and have to make do with the best we have on offer. As Larch and Spruce aren’t native in Ireland, this is the best we can do with regards to those species.
After finding and photographing the trees we set out to find the right person to gain permission. This turned out to be harder than walking to the trees in the first place. After some detective work, we got the right man and returned to the site with him. A quicker route as he had the key to the locked gate! When he saw what we wanted he was happy for us to remove trees that he was going to have to remove anyway.
The moral of this story, always ask for permission. I’ve asked twice this year for two separate sites and both were happy to say yes on hearing what they were for. Take a bonsai book with you to show examples and keep a big friendly smile on yer face. Works a treat 🙂
Here are the photos of a few of the trees we looked at. First some of the larch. Not the best trees but it gives you an idea of the ground we are collecting from. The trees are right on the treeline of the mountain and are quite exposed.

Phil gets the camcorder out. The deadwood on the ground is the remains of Lodgepole Pine that had been planed there but failed at some point a few years ago. A few survivors still showing here and there.


Typical damage caused by goats.



Trees eaten early on by having there apex damaged result in multi trunk trees. This is one of them but there are a few really tasty looking ones there and for some reason I didn’t snap them at the time.





Some of the Sitka Spruce that have to be removed. Someone told me today that they are spikey buggers. I found that out for myself yesterday!!




This one is interesting. I couldn’t get both my hands around the base of this one. It’s 4 feet tall but after major height reduction, I think it’ll make a powerful tree.

Showing some of the terrain that we had to walk over.


We spotted this Lodgepole Pine and gave it a closer look.




Me for scale. Some nice bark and deadwood on it. A few others were pointed out by the landowner later in the day as the light was disappearing.
Some nice little mountain streams feeding down into the lake nearby.

Some nice little mountain streams feeding down into the lake nearby.

Stream cut through a peat bog surrounded by heather.

So there you go, I hope you enjoyed the photos as much as we enjoyed our day out. Being caught out in an open area during a cloud burst and having sore legs today was worth it. 🙂
I had planned to spend a little time posting pics from a trip to the Sperrin Mountains in County Tyrone today. Phil and I wanted to check out a new site for collecting Larch and try and get the necessary permission to do this.
It was a successful trip but I’m just too knackered to post now 🙂 I’ll add all the photos tomorrow. In the mean time, here’s a pic to wet the appetite.

Many of you have heard me talking about trees belonging to my friend Stephen. Stephen and I met way back in 1995 when he joined the NI Bonsai Society. We have stayed good friends ever since. You will recognise him from my Sunday walks as he’s a fellow dog walker and nature lover. I can honestly say that Stephen is one of the nicest blokes you’ll meet in bonsai circles in East Belfast 😀 Oh OK, Northern Ireland and the world beyond 😉 I count myself lucky to have him as a friend.
Today Stephen took the plunge and started his own blog. Like me, he is starting this because he wants to keep a record of his bonsai and related events during the year. He asked me to help him get started with his blog and I was happy to oblige. I doubt he’ll be as a prolific a poster as me, who is 🙂 he isn’t a computer lover, but, with encouragement, I think he’ll happily become an internet regular.
Why Bonsai Baker? Simple, he keeps bonsai and he’s a baker 🙂
Click on the image above to visit his blogsite. It’s bare bones at the moment but be assured, I’ll be keeping the pressure on him to add more. He has plenty of trees to share with us. You can also follow him on FlickR and Facebook.
Leave him a few words of encouragement.
This has been shared on Facebook and YouTube!! It’s about 10 years old and is an interesting watch. Shinji Suzuki is the main focus of the video, a fantastic bonsai Artist.
I wondered about it being up on youtube, but after a quick internet search, it seems to be readily available to download free on the net via ebooks and many other sources.
I stumbled across these on You Tube and think they deserve a few more hits. It follows Andrew Sellman’s trip to Japan. Some very clever editing in there too.
Mr Warren pops up in this one 🙂
The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2011 annual report for this blog.
Here’s an excerpt:
The concert hall at the Syndey Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 50,000 times in 2011. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 19 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.
Bjorn and Owen have made it very easy for me to decide what to post here on the last day of the year, Thanks guys 🙂
The latest video from the Bonsai Art of Japan is a parody of some of the best You Tube Bonsai Channels out there, and also, some of the worst 🙂
You really need to see these links as well to fully understand where this is all coming from.
Lindsay Farr’s World of Bonsai – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhEkwNVFq6E
White Pine Inspiration – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qVM2AKctips
Wolf Meditation –http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGbs6QwxL8M&list=UUTg68jVX0EeA0NUEMgSlUwg&…
Funny Asian Guy – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJ1bwUxVnAA
Mr. Potter’s Series – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHIvEFiuJNo
A few comments from myself after viewing: [spoiler alert]
Owen, you really need to work on your Aussie and Brit accents 🙂 I loved the Farr hat but you are missing the hair for Mr Wolf 😀
I also loved :
Your Farr nursery visit on Fast Forward, made me cry
White Pine fondling
frother/shocker,
Sam Jotter – hit with a wheelie bin :-), take pride in your wiring!
Asian Guy, mass production and by the way, this is so nice camera 🙂
and my favourite bit, ‘I’m not sure how this man got into my nursery… or why he’s here’ Fecking brilliant 🙂 You must have sooo many out take clips after this!!!
Thank you guys for all your efforts in bringing us your series this year. Long may it continue.

of taking a ….. photograph of course. Why, what did you think I was doing??!!
This was me last week whilst out tree hunting. Phil sneakily took this one while I was trying to get a shot of some fungi on a log. Now on his Facebook page under the title, ‘Mushroom Man’.
This was the result.


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