Posts categorized "Our Yearly Messages"

December 30, 2007

Our Message for 2008

I just reread last year's message, and most of it is still true. Life still revolves around getting older, only with more serious consequences as our parents are very near to reaching the end. Susie lost her mother this year, and my parents are in their 80's and not in the best of health. Many of my aunts and uncles are gone, even some of my friends. This has increased my resolve even more. It's time to start doing the things that make life worth living whatever the cost. As my friend Jeff says, he's never seen a hearse with a trailer hitch on it.

On that note, I have been working on finishing projects like a man on fire this year. I have finished the new bonsai display area,  doubled the shade house, and made a heroic effort to at least reduce the Jungle area. I doubled the grafts this year, pruned nearly all the specimen plants and have plans to repot many of them this winter to get at least some of them up at the website this year. There is still plenty to be done, but at last the end is in sight.

Displayarea

The New Display Area encased in ice from the freeze protection

The new shade house is especially exciting. It will allow me to organize and clean out the old one because the plants will have some place to go after I prune and repot them. I have a plan to control 'blowover', and if it works, it will really lower maintenance and increase organization. I hope to get busy on this project when we get back from Florida later in January.

Shadearea

The new shade area before the shade cloth went up

A  couple of new sections of the  pine and juniper area will also go in this winter to take some more of the Jungle plants. Some of those plants are becoming quite nice Nursery Yamadori from the benign neglect of the last nine years. Graydon and George from Florida came and visited for a week in October and carved out a large section of the jungle plants that went into the ground growing area. I really appreciate their help and we had a great time of endless shop talk, good food and drink. The next step is to rescue the Jungle plants that need to stay in pots rather than go into the ground.

Hard pruning all the specimen plants has revealed some really nice trunks, which is now known as the 'field of trunks'. You really can't appreciate what is happening under all those branches and foliage until you chop all the way back to the trunk.  They are awesome, and with any luck, I should get a number of these potted up this year  and ready to sell. There are four to seven inch corky elms, assorted crabs, a few really nice Zelkova, and other odds and ends. I posted some pictures on BonsaiNut, and I hope to post some more here soon. This is very exciting work, the payoff of nearly twenty years of growing.

Trunkfield

The field of trunks

One more addition to the display area will be dedicated to specimen plants that are ready to sell. So, as I pot up the trunks, they will go in this area where they can be tracked and properly maintained.  Hopefully that will also happen this winter. The water is plumbed in and I intend to use all of the old benches from the former display area. Just need to design another shade canopy. It's a challenge to provide shade and still deal with all the leaves and nuts from the walnut trees.

2007 was a good propagation year. Not a record number of plants started, except for pine grafts (nearly 500 this year), but enough to fill in the gaps for 2008. I started a good number of 'Evergreen's Roughbark' trident maples. The strike rate appears to be low, but I started so many that I may have enough next fall to fill the waiting list orders. Finally got enough wood to do a crop of Prunus blireiana, and most of them have rooted. Some folks have been waiting for that one for many years. I also managed to scrounge up enough wood to start a batch of Prunus subhirtella 'Autumnalis', which we have been out of for several years. I am continuing to experiment with Wisteria cuttings, and made a big breakthough on what wood to use. I hope to have some 'Cooke's Special' by fall, if not before. This is an excellent deep purple cultivar and one of my favorites. Also had a minor breakthrough on Hokkaido elm, and a limited supply of them are ready now, albeit a bit small. Syringa patula 'Miss Kim' will be back this year too.

I am continuing to experiment with cutting grown Acer palmatum cultivars, but there wasn't a lot of decent wood this year, so not muc to report. I had an excellent crop of 'Kiyo Hime' and 'Yuri Hime' last year, and these are all progressing nicely. I probably won't sell any of these until they reach one gallon size in about 2 more years. The one gallon 'Ao Kanzashi' from last year are getting very nice now, so if you want one of these you better act soon before they are potted up into 2 gallon size.

I couldn't get any 'Catlin Contorted' elm wood this year, so there will be a gap in the supply. But there are quite a few that will be ready in September, so you better get on the waiting list if you want one of these rare little puppies. New this year is Ilex serrata, Japanese Winterberry. We have both male and female cutting grown plants. You probably don't need a male plant for flowers and fruit, but it may improve pollination. These have small very red round fruits in winter on naked, almost black stems. This is a small shrubby species and is probably best for very small bonsai and winter accent plants. Also, my Princess Persimmon, Diospyros rhombifolia fruited this year, so in a year or so we should have cutting grown plants as well as our seedlings. It has very cute one inch orange persimmons.

Princesspersim

Princess Persimmon

Susie and I will be in sunny Florida for a week on our annual pilgrimage to see the old folks, so no shipping the week of Jan. 7. Next ship date is Jan. 14. You can continue to place orders and send emails, but I won't be able to respond until after we get back.

The 2008 Online Catalgo is up!

December 24, 2006

Our Message for 2007

The 2007 Catalog is Up!

It's been an interesting year. If I had to sum it up in one sentence, I would have to say that my life now revolves around getting older. I hit the big six-o this year, and I think this has come harder for me harder than any other decade other than hitting thirty (remember hippies?: you can't trust anyone over thirty). I was depressed at thirty, but this is different. I haven't got time to get depressed! Susie and I are well into the planning stages of retirement, which will be here in another six years. Oh, stop rubbing your hands together, there won't be any gigantic fire sale  of Evergreen's trees forthcoming. The nursery will go on until I die, I guarantee you that, and that is probably a good twenty or thiry years off.

But I do have to change my ways. Time is no longer this endless ocean of possibilities. It has become a finite commodity, something I can no longer afford to waste. I have to work more efficiently, and plan around phasing out of construction projects and growth. I want to go out busy, but I want to be busy on my terms, not someone else's, or captive of this business. So things will change. In future years, there will be less emphasis on propagation and more emphasis on training and finishing trees. More time for travel too. All of this will take a sea change in how I work. I have started by slowing down. I don't rush at anything anymore, it isn't worth it. Several times a day, I find myself losing it, going faster than is enjoyable, and then asking myself "Where is the joy in this?" That's pretty much all it takes to get me back on center again.

I still have some unresolved planning issues such as how to handle those truly manual and grudging chores that I can't do, or don't want to do anymore. At this point, hiring someone is out of the question, so I have to go about it obliquely and somehow find a way to make more money, so I can hire someone part time. I really prefer to work alone, and have worked alone most of my life, but that just has to change, for at least a few hours a week.

Interesting questions now arise about how long things last. When I put the new roof on the house, is it going to last longer than me? I hope so. Will my '84 Toyota truck with 239,000 miles on it live for another two decades. Not so sure about that one, but I am going to give it a go. I can still rebuild engines with a little help, the rest of it is hanging in there pretty good. Most of the nursery structures will probably start to expire about the same time I do, so that will be ok. I will need less of that kind of infrastructure at the end anyhow. I want to sitting in the studio wiring little trees more than being out there in the sun. I probably have one more dog from puppy size in me (us). I agonize over the thought of leaving a dog alone in this world without me, although I am making preparations for that too. You might think that this stuff is depressing, but actually it isn't, it's liberating. A whole new phase of my life is beginning, and with any luck at all, it can be the best phase. Afterall, I still have my mind, and it just continues to get better, even if I can't remember my phone number sometimes.

So, I guess my message to all our customers for 2007 is, prepare to see less material in the future, but better material in the future. And bigger too. At long last, I think I am getting a handle on actually getting some of the larger stuff up to snuff so I can sell it. Especially look for larger and more developed pines to start to come on line. There's a lot of them out there, and many will be repotted this year and offered up for sale by this fall. More junipers are coming along too, although it will probably be 2008 before more of the larger stuff is ready. Meanwhile, expect to see a few more cutting grown Japanese maples come down the pike. I love growing those little guys, and the new propagation greenhouse is showing great potential for starting these if I can just get enough wood from the stock plants. That's exciting stuff.

Well, Happy Holidays, keep your face to the sun,  your back to the wind, and make every moment count.

Brent

My Photo
Blog powered by TypePad

Links to Indivdual Posts