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Shimpaku
juniper A border crossing
from the north brought this juniper, grown by Tak Yamura to Seattle.
It was untrained stock material. The design is the owner's own. |
| Hemlock Here is a mountain hemlock, a.k.a.
alpine hemlock which was collected in the North of Vancouver
Island five years ago. It has been in training for two years.
Thorough and careful sculpture has exposed the value. |
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Scotch
pine (A noted english
bonsai guy once told me that scotch is a drink, and that this
tree is SCOTS pine, maybe he just had a drink when he told me
this?) In the early 1980's a trio of gals, Shirley Stafford,
Mary McDiarmid and Sharon Muth stopped by a nursery on their
return trip from collecing in the Mt. Hood area of Oregon. Each
purchased a one gallon Scots pine. This is Sharon's tree. It's
new owner purchased it in 1999. Where are the other two? |
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| Black
pine This began as
a five gallon nursery stock in 1988. In 1994 it was cut down
to the first main branch. It was styled at a lecture at the Pacific
Rim Bonsai Collection in 1998. |
| Ponderosa
pine About twelve
years ago a group of bonsai enthusiasts from the Seattle area
flew to Denver for a collecting trip with Dick Melleny and Harold
Sasaki. John Muth went on three of these excursions. This is
one of the many ponderosa that he brought back. It's difficult
to estimate the age, but it's probably at least 200 years old. |
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Page 8 of 9
Convention 2003 hosted by
Puget Sound Bonsai Association
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