Due to the unnaturally hot weather today, I decide to try and stay out of the sun, given the tendency of bald spots to burn and necks to turn red. I have spent the day pottering around the house doing odd jobs and checking on the home brew, replying to emails and doing a bit of preparation before going off to Texas next week.
I decided  to do something which I should have done a while ago and I spent an  hour cleaning my tools. This is something I have always been quite  fastidious about but have let it slip recently. It is essential to  maintain tools on a regular basis so that cutting edges stay sharp,  joints do not rust and so that disease cannot spread. As I travel to  many bonsai gardens across the world there is potential for spreading  fungal diseases and I do not want to be responsible for the Bonsai  version of Dutch Elm. 
Sounds corny but clean tools mean a clean mind and a focus on the job  ahead.  Even the greatest artists in the world had to clean their own  paintbrushes. I have been meaning to write a whole "How-to" thing about tool  maintenance, I approached Bonsai Focus about it but they were not overly  keen to get on with it.  I need someone who can do some good photos and  maybe some videos to help me out here...
One of the reasons my tools were so dirty were because I had been  doing a few days work with Ian of British Bonsai. Here is the before and  after of one little Juniper that we worked on. The aim is to get it in  to BSA 2012. Without wanting to sound patronising, it is a pretty little  tree and has enough character to hold its own amongst other container  grown trees. I look forward to its development. It will never be a world  beater but it is what it is.  More details to follow.
Looking forward to next week’s trip to Texas and Rochester to see some of the best Bonsai in the States and catch up with some friends.
I would like to thank you for the serious and open way you share your Bonsai experiences!
ReplyDeleteOpenness is what we need in this small world!
I'll keep visiting your Blog as a source of inspiration!