THE FIRST DEADWOOD SESSION ON ED’S OLD OLIVE.

Hi, everybody,

finally, last Thursday was a lovely Sunny day to do some bonsai work! So my eager bonsai student Ed van der Reek immediately came over to my garden to start to work on the amazing deadwood of his recently bought old Olive. For the last couple of surprisingly cold weeks, the tree stayed as a guest in my winter shelter to protect it from the elements! All through the elaborate deadwood on this tree is truly unique, but it those not make it any easier to style! A few weeks ago,  when Ed brought the tree to my garden, we discussed the future of this tree. And we both quickly came to the conclusion that we should try to incorporate the deadwood in the design! It would be a crime not to try to build the tree around this unique feature! The history of this tree is locked in all that deadwood, so it is up to us to design a believable bonsai out of it! A big exciting challenge indeed, but we both believe it is doable!

                        Here are some pictures of that first deadwood session!

                                            Above: Before the work started.

Above: This section was too rough and fat, so it had to be removed and improved!

                                                    Above: Carefully sawing.

                                           Above: That worked out nicely!

Above: Some sheltering wasp were replaced into the front garden. This little beauty can hollow out a tree in one season! I learned this the hard way!

Above: Refining and shaping the deadwood as much as possible from below. This way the beautiful old deadwood, that is in view on the top, is not harmed!

                   Above: This section, up to the yellow line,  has to go as well.

                                                  Above: Worked perfectly.

                                                Above: Looks better already.

            Above: Ed reducing and styling the top section with my power tools.

Above: The end result for now. A lot more deadwood work needs to be done, but that is for the next sunny day!

Cheers,

Hans van Meer.

Info: karamottobonsai@hotmail.com

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WIRING MY LARCH “XL”.

Hi, everybody.

Last 2 days, I spend a couple of freezing hours rewiring my Larch named “XL”.  All the older branches were still in their place, even though it was not wired last year!  So I hope that after this ongoing restyling I can repot it into the pot I bought for it a few days ago!  When they hopefully make a good combo and after one more year of new growth added to the foliage pads, I plan to show it next year for the first time! So fingers crossed that all works out! And if not, there is always the next year! I will post the story of that repotting as soon as it’s done! I hope that tomorrow will be a bit warmer, I can’t feel my fingers anymore! 🙂

Below: Where possible, the thicker-sized wire is applied directly from the roll. This way you have to use less power and you never will cut off too much or too little wire!

Thick wire is applied directly from the roll.

Cheers,

Hans van Meer.

Info: karamottobonsai@hotmail.com

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THE START OF A NEW BONSAI SEASON IS HERE!

Hi, everybody,

I was thrilled that the time had finally arrived to be able to do some work on my trees again! And early this week, whenever the weather allowed for it,  I rewired and restyled  3 of my deciduous trees.  And for today, after two days of bad storms, I planned to rewire my small Hawthorn again and reposition all the branches into their desired places. Well, the day started out as a mild and even sunny day, but unfortunately, that did not last very long! At the end of the 2 hours wiring and styling session, I was half frozen and glad to get indoors again where it was warm!  

     Below: This is how this tree looked in February 2008.

 
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 Although I realize that this little tree needs a lot more work and growing time to fill out correctly, I am still pretty happy with the result for now!

 
  

This little Hawthorn will feature in a progressive styling story that I am writing for a bonsai magazine, and in a few week’s time,  I hope to repot it into the lovely Chinese green-coloured pot that my dear friend Dan Barton gave to me as a present, the last time I was a guest at his house! I will let you all know how that works out! 

Cheers,   

 Hans van Meer.   

Info: karamottobonsai@hotmail.com

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BEST WISHES TO ALL!!!

Hi, everybody,

as this last year is almost over and I look back at it, I can only hope that 2011 will bring some more peace and joy to my little family. And I wish you all who visit my blog and bonsai site a merry Christmas and a very happy and healthy New Year!

             *above picture was made last week close to where I live. 

Stay safe and C U in the next year with a big smile!

Regards,

Hans van Meer.

Info: karamottobonsai@hotmail.com

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RESTYLING MY SMALL “P. PINE”.

 *note: This story has been posted earlier on 27-8-2010.

 

Hi, everybody,
I would like to share these pictures that I made this afternoon during the restyling of my small 37cm/14,1 inch Pinus sylvestris named “P. PINE”, that I found and collected In Austria in May 2002. Well, I found it, is not completely true! My wife actually drew my intention to this tree first! We were just taking a well-deserved rest after a very long climb up one of the many beautiful mountains that surrounded the cabin where we stayed during that week. And while my wife was enjoying the magnificent views, I took the opportunity to get rid of some of the excess water that I had drunk so much of during the long climb up (if you know what I mean?). I had just assumed the wide stand manly position when my wife said “ you might want to stop what you are doing and lift up your left foot” ?! I looked down to discover that my left foot was resting on a very small Pine, which I had totally not noticed, because of the knee-high grass it grew in. So I stopped in the middle, which is not that easy, what I was doing!  Then after a closer look, I collected the tree without any problem and took it home where it has been living in my small garden ever since. So now you know why this little tree is called “P. PINE”!

                                    Below: 21-1-2003 the year after collecting.

Below: Unwanted branches were removed and others were cut back to promote back budding.


Below: Very carefully the tree is wired, and that is hard to do with my big fingers! Smile And then the branches were brought into position.

                  Below: Then the tree was re-potted into a larger training pot.

Below: May 2006. Still in that same bigger training pot.

                                                                   PART II.

Below: Yesterday, the needles from last year were one by one, carefully removed. Unwanted branches were removed and others were shortened again. Now the tree is ready to be wired again.

Below: Close up. I love that dark colour of that weathered and old deadwood!

Below: Here the tree is wired. And now the fun part is about to start, the actual styling!

                       Below: The finished new look of the “P. PINE” for now!

In the near future, “P. PINE” will be planted deeper in a smaller and more suited pot. But that is for later! Until then I have to concentrate on getting some more foliage and better ramification. But even though she is a long way from finished, I am already pretty happy with the mature and tall tree look and feel that she is slowly acquiring! I think she is becoming a very elegant little Bonsai!
I hope you enjoyed this little story of my “P. PINE”?
Cheers,
Hans van Meer.

Info: karamottobonsai@hotmail.com

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PICTURE OF MY PUNICA YAMADORI SHOHIN.

*Note: This is posted before early Sept. 2010.

Hi, everybody,
today I shot some pictures of my trees and I would love to show you two that I made of my old Punica yamadori Shohin that I have been caring for more than 15 years now. I especial like the mature root base on this small tree that only measures 21cm/8.4inch. I find the colour and texture of this pot from John Pitt stunning and they match the tree perfectly! This little tree has given us a lot of pleasure over the years! I hope you enjoy the pictures?

Cheers,

Hans van Meer.

Info: karamottobonsai@hotmail.com

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A YEAR IN THE LIFE OF “THE ELEPHANT” LARCH.

This post was previously posted on Sept 02, 2010.

Hi, everybody,
I am currently working on part IV of my “ELEPHANT” story to post onto my karamotto bonsai website HERE and while going through all the photo’s I shot this year, I thought it might be a nice idea to post here 3 of the progressing pictures from this growing season for my friends who visit my blog.
I have been working on this old Larch since 2004 and next season it is finally time to plant it into a nice pot! I can’t wait to see how it will look in a proper pot! I hope that the “ELEPHANT’ will be showable in 2013. But I don’t mind the waiting at all and I look forward to working those few years on improving this fine tree!
Above: 10-4-2010. After more than 2 days of wiring. Still, without, its new foliage, you can better see just how many layers and levels I created in every main branch. I know it is far from perfect yet, but it is slowly getting there! Very Happy

                                                     Above: 24-4-2010.
                                                        Above: 10-5-2010.

                                                       Above: 29-9-2010.

Here is a close-up of the partially exposed root base. Over the years several large obstructive roots were removed from the front side. This was done in several steps, spread out over two years. Doing it this way, most of the otherwise large wound, had time to close itself, leaving only a small wound when the rest of the root was removed. If you look at the middle of the picture you can see some cut-paste from one I recently removed. The small scare that is now left is 4 times smaller than when I would have cut it off in one go! I love that flaky bark!

Cheers,
Hans van Meer.

Info: karamottobonsai@hotmail.com

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I hope you enjoyed this little update on the “ELEPHANT” ?!
Cheers,
Hans van Meer.
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A YEAR IN THE LIVE OF MY NEW BERBERIS SHOHIN.

*Note: This next styling  I did in September 2010. It has been posted previously, but I know that a lot of you have not seen it, so I am really glad that now I can show it on my blog!

Hi, everybody,

I bought this Urban Yamadori a year ago at my friend Teunis Jan Klein’s place “Deshima”. This sweet little plant and 3 others that I bought that day, were selvaged growing around a 50-year-old train station that was about to be demolished. I fell for the thickness and movement of that short trunk that was hidden underneath all that young foliage. This is how she looked when I bought her on 5-9-2009:

Above: As you can see in these pictures, the plastic container was broken, so that same day, I replaced it with a similar-sized one of my own.

Below: 28-1-2010. I had a good day recovering from my back operation, so I felt like doing something! And this little Berberis thunbergii was not too big to handle, but challenging enough to keep me busy! Smile

Below: After its first styling. In this picture, you can see that I left two possible cascading branches on the tree. I wanted to get more used to this little tree’s new image before I finally would decide which one to save and use in my design. A few days later I looked at the tree again and then I knew for sure, so I removed the top/back branch. I liked the future of the bottom/front branch that I saved better. And removing the front/bottom branch would have meant, that I would be left with a large scar, smack in my face! So the choice was not that difficult after all. But there is no sense in rushing these things!

Below: 19-9-2010. And this is, after a few little more wires were applied, how she looks today after just one year in my garden. Amazing how quick this species grows!

                                                           Below: For size!


I can’t wait to plant it in a nice bluish/greenish cascade pot. I think that colour would look beautiful with the yellow flowers and later on with the dark green/purple-red foliage and red berries! I hope you enjoyed this little story?!
Cheers,
Hans van Meer.

 Info: karamottobonsai@hotmail.com

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RESTYLING “WOLFIE” MY MUGO PINE.

Hi, everybody,

I did this next restyling in the first week of October 2010. I posted it that same week for the first time. I am glad that I can now re-post it onto my blog because I think a lot of people might not have read it before! 

Hi, everybody,
a few days ago we had some surprisingly warm and sunny weather, so I decided it was a brilliant day to do some light bonsai work. The week before I had removed all the wire raffia, and tape and plucked all the old needles. So “Wolfie” was all ready to be restyled again!
In 2003 I and Tony Tickle had the privilege to visit the wonderful garden and Bonsai collection of my friend Wolfgang Putz in Austria. Besides sampling from Wolfgang’s enormous collection of self-made snaps (11 o’clock in the morning), I was also lucky enough to swap with him one of my Yamadori Yews, which I had brought along, for this old Mugo Pine, that Wolfgang had collected himself! Wolfgang was very generous to us that day! He is one of the nicest guy’s I had the pleasure to meet and that’s why I named this little tree “Wolfie”! The nickname that we used when we spook about Wolfgang!

Below: In my own garden. This is how the present front side of the tree looked in 2003.

                                                    Below: Future backside.

In 2005 I was invited to do a two-day demo at the famous “Joy of bonsai” in Bath (UK). So I brought along “Wolfie” to give it its first styling. Because, Wolfgang had planted this tree tilted more to the right, my initial styling by me was done in a slightly different way and direction than it’s present design. But the general idea never changed.

Below: During my demo at “Joy of bonsai”.
This main branch needed a lot of protection before I would try to bend it closer to the trunk. All along the length of that branch, there is a lot of twirling deadwood that made it almost impossible to bend. But it did bend without breaking anywhere!

                                        Below: Working on the deadwood.

                               Below: The final result of a day’s hard work.

Below: 2006. Here I repotted the tree for the first time. Because Wolfgang had planted this tree on a piece of Styrofoam, it had a wonderful flat root base! So I was able to plant it into a shallow round pot. I was pleasantly surprised to discover that the root base on the right side, which was hidden before, was wonderful, so I planted the tree tilted more to the left side. Showing the whole width of the root base. And in this way, you can just see peeking over the right root base, a piece of the rock that “Wolfie” has his grip on, on its backside!

                               Below: This is how it looked in May 2006.

Below: In early 2009 “Wolfie” was repotted again tilted some more to the left side. And later that year I restyled it again to fit this new planting angle.

Below: A few days ago. I am finally getting used to working on a tree while sitting down. But I can’t wait to be able to do it standing up again! First, the large Jin/deadwood section on the left side was extended. Now it is running along the underside of the trunk to the right side. The Jin itself will be restyled, when I am more used to the new image of the tree. Then the tree was wired and the deadwood was cleaned and treated with Lime Sulphur. I know it looks way too bright, but I know from experience that it will become more natural looking in a few months’ time.

Below: With a soft brush on a slow-spinning power tool, the excess lime sulphur is removed from the live bark. Now the deadwood is bleached you can clearly see the Shari that runs across this old curling branch.

Below: Then with the help of my trusty garbage bin with a turning wheel, the tree was elevated to almost eye-level height. Working standing up, with the tree at this height is the best way for me to style a tree! I really need to be able to step backwards and forwards. And to bend sideways and up and downwards. Here I am just about satisfied for now.

Below: So here is the newly styled image of “Wolfie”. The first hanging branch, along with two other major branches, is removed. There is an exciting new empty space just above first Jin on the left and the old empty space underneath the trunk is now more prominent and holds the tree up. Because of these new empty spaces, more of the amazing trunk movement is shown, with all its flaws and quirkiness. Now that left Jin is lengthened into a Shari, even that long straight trunk section doesn’t bother me anymore. It makes this little tree more exciting to look at. There is even a piece of rock living in the middle of that part of the trunk. “Wolfie” must have picked up this pebble ages ago and they have been companions ever since. The grown branches need to fill out some more and the Jins need more refining, but that’s for later!

I am really pleased with this new and more mature image of “Wolfie”. I hope you enjoyed this little story?!
Cheers,
Hans van Meer.

Below: This was my reply to the emails I received after I had posted the above story for the first time.  

Thanks, guys!
I am glad that you like “Wolfie’s” new image! It is such a strangely shaped tree, and it has been quite a challenge to find some sort of balance in its disbalance! I hope that that makes any sense? Smile It is hard to see in these pictures, but this tree makes the strangest moves. This present front side is really the only front side possible, but that meant having to deal with that straight section and a root base that almost runs diagonally from the right front corner towards the left backside corner. Away from the viewer! And to make things even more difficult, two of the main branches are all naturally curled up and full of Shari, making it almost impossible to make big changes in their position. But it was an inspiring challenge to try to find the tree inside this Pine with a mind of his own!  I tried to use its flaws? as a prominent part of my design. Why hide nature’s quirkiness and mishaps? They tell us the history of this old tree and all the struggles it had to endure in its long live high in the mountains. That’s why I fell in love with this tree, the first time I saw it at Wolfgang’s place. Its obvious signs of struggle and hardship made him special to me. So I tried my best to bring out the hidden beauty of these signs of the hard life it had to endure.

Below: 2009. A close-up picture of the right side. The red arrow points to the present front side. I made a yellow dotted line across the length of the trunk, that if you follow it, gives you a good idea about the fact that some were in its past this tree was forced to grow in a completely different direction! He almost made a full twist on itself to the left side, that over time turned into a knot. From that knot, the straight section starts, leading into the Jin on the left side of the tree. Here you can also see the stone that “Wolfie” is holding onto.

Below: Another picture from 2009. Here you can see the small pieces of wood that I just to hold the very old branches into their new place after the wire was removed. The first white arrow on the trunk points at this knot in the trunk. And shows how this twisted part looks from the front side. Then when you follow the trunk line further upward, there is a second white arrow on the trunk pointing at a second full twist in the trunk line! And you have a clear view of how the main branches have grown in circles over decades.

It is such a fun tree to work on. And I can’t wait to find a great pot for “Wolfie”, but I still have a couple of years’ time to find that perfect one, so there is no rush!

Cheers,
Hans van Meer.

 Info: karamottobonsai@hotmail.com

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THANK YOU PAUL STOKES!!!

Hi, everybody,

I am back! Thanks to all the hard work that Paul Stokes has done,  my blog is up and running again! He even managed to retrieve all my lost pictures and drawings, that otherwise would have been mostly lost for good! This blog is my outlet for the Bonsai world and the thought of losing it all made me really sad! So I can’t begin to thank Paul enough for salvaging all my stories and work!!!

It might take me a while, but I do O.U an article Paul! That is the least that I can do for all your troubles!

I will start to post some of the work I have done over the last mounts this afternoon! So stay tuned!

Thanks again, Paul!!!!

Cheers,

Hans van Meer.

Info: karamottobonsai@hotmail.com

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