Anti-Fiddle Techniques...

I convince myself that I hate bonsai every january and february (it helps). And mid summer i go to a quarry or field and just start training and chopping weedy j. virginiana. They grow like grass here, plus maybe one day I'll re-stumble upon one of my old friends and take him/her home.
 
Damn, I barely have time to fiddle. I work, my wife works, our time is split. When's shes home, i'm at work. When I'm home she's at work. Kids, cooking, house cleaning, laundry, chores all take up my days. By the time I get to do any bonsai activity it's 10 pm and I find myself rushing through it so I can get to bed to do it all over again the next day. No wonder it all comes out shitty. I need a live in nanny, or a live in bonsai pro.
 
Damn, I barely have time to fiddle. I work, my wife works, our time is split. When's shes home, i'm at work. When I'm home she's at work. Kids, cooking, house cleaning, laundry, chores all take up my days. By the time I get to do any bonsai activity it's 10 pm and I find myself rushing through it so I can get to bed to do it all over again the next day. No wonder it all comes out shitty. I need a live in nanny, or a live in bonsai pro.

The Sorceress hates me for not having typed that!

Sorce
 
Potted JBP need good winter protection in zone 5 but it shouldn't be too difficult to provide.

Ok so 2 more questions then:
- if it's fine with a good protection in a pot I assume it's just plain fine as a yard's tree, right?
- are JWP more cold resistant (in pot)?
:)
 
Ok so 2 more questions then:
- if it's fine with a good protection in a pot I assume it's just plain fine as a yard's tree, right?
- are JWP more cold resistant (in pot)?
:)
Japanese Black Pine are hardy into zone 5 as landscape trees, but I'd want them sited to get some protection if possible. Japanese White Pine are zone 4 hardy and are more suited to cold climates, both as landscape trees and as bonsai.
 
So you don't want to know what "zydeco" meant in the first place?

Ah là là, tu es devenu un vrai yankee... :D

No I don't know what a zydeco is but I was more speaking of the 'lesson giver' part anyway...
 
OK. Enough suspense :D :

"Zydeco" is an alteration of "les haricots", "les z-haricots" with a linking "z" sound in popular 18th century French. Actually, most French-speaking people now sound it like "lezariko", with the syllable "za" stressed since "les" is an article.

This is Cajun dialect: French-speaking people who were forcibly removed from "Acadie" when the English invaded the land, and went to Louisiana. Acadians (les Acadiens) became known as "Cajuns".

"Zydeco" comes from a popular song called "Les Haricots Sont Pas Salés".

Since the accordion was a favourite instrument for people there (the fiddle was more Irish or English), a local company took the name "Zydeco".

I'm pretty sure most French-speaking people (all around the world!) would not understand much in "Les Haricots Sont Pas Salés" (Beans are not salted) though the verses are... minimalist ;)

 
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Now you're talking my part of the country! Zydeco is some pretty lively music. I come from Cajun stock on both sides ...... Simoneaux and Dupre' .... not "Doo-pree" but "Doo-pray".
 
OK. Enough suspense :D :

"Zydeco" is an alteration of "les haricots", "les z-haricots" with a linking "z" sound in popular 18th century French. Actually, most French-speaking people now sound it like "lezariko", with the syllable "za" stressed since "les" is an article.

This is Cajun dialect: French-speaking people who were forcibly removed from "Acadie" when the English invaded the land, and went to Louisiana. Acadians (les Acadiens) became known as "Cajuns".

I'm pretty sure most French-speaking people would not understand much in "Les Haricots Sont Pas Salés" (Beans are not salted) though the verses are... minimalist ;)


Not only a talented bonsai artist, but also a gifted French-speaking person, huh? :p
 
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