Cadillactaste
Neagari Gal
I think it's just the growth that comes with having ones feet wet a bit longer. You can differentiate better quality than once before. Before...I seen potential in just about anything one could bonsai. Now, I for myself crinkle my nose and think...not worth my time.
I was pondering the other day...am I becoming a bonsai snob!?!
Then I think...Have I not heard from the beginning...nebari,trunk movement, and taper. Maybe it's not being a snob...but, realizing that I just finally grasp what the guidelines are...and why they are in place. Maybe I want to see character and such in a tree that it makes you still love a tree while its years being worked into a proper bonsai. The bones are so amazing that it just makes you burst with anticipation of the development stages. And pride in the stock you have on your table.
I have a few in my earlier stages of bonsai that will end up landscape...did I make a mistake back then in my choices? I would like to think I didn't. I think the mistake now, is to waist my time on material that would make better landscape material. I don't see it as a failure on my part for the purchase...because if we're learning and moving on from mistakes then it's a crucial rung on a ladder so to speak...just as important when we lose a tree...to learn from it. Then even a loss isn't quite looked upon as failure...but lessons in us growing...as our hobby and knowledge grows.
Enjoy the journey...have no regrets...there are no regrets as long as a lesson is learned along the way.
I was pondering the other day...am I becoming a bonsai snob!?!
Then I think...Have I not heard from the beginning...nebari,trunk movement, and taper. Maybe it's not being a snob...but, realizing that I just finally grasp what the guidelines are...and why they are in place. Maybe I want to see character and such in a tree that it makes you still love a tree while its years being worked into a proper bonsai. The bones are so amazing that it just makes you burst with anticipation of the development stages. And pride in the stock you have on your table.
I have a few in my earlier stages of bonsai that will end up landscape...did I make a mistake back then in my choices? I would like to think I didn't. I think the mistake now, is to waist my time on material that would make better landscape material. I don't see it as a failure on my part for the purchase...because if we're learning and moving on from mistakes then it's a crucial rung on a ladder so to speak...just as important when we lose a tree...to learn from it. Then even a loss isn't quite looked upon as failure...but lessons in us growing...as our hobby and knowledge grows.
Enjoy the journey...have no regrets...there are no regrets as long as a lesson is learned along the way.