European Bonsai Tour #7 The EBA show in Ljubljana, Slovenia

This weekend was the EBA show in Ljubljana. I Exhibited a tree, was a headline demonstrator, I traded my Yamadori and I did a presentation about Hawthorns! The weekend has been full on, but what made this extra special was that I did not have to stay in a hotel, I stayed with Nik Rozman and his wonderful parents Peter and Marina… it truly was home from home.

Staying with Nik was great because having somebody who was ‘local’ and deeply involved with the organising club meant that a lot of the ‘formalities’ (translating, help with my trade stand, drivers) were easily overcome. My thanks goes to them for making my stay so enjoyable.

The majority of exhibition was a very high standard, with 11 countries taking part with over trees on show and 12 traders. Normally the first day is busier, not on this occasion. Saturday was a VERY hot 28c and sunny with the people through the door less than expected. The exact opposite on Sunday VERY cold 4c and overcast. More than three times the amount of people came.

Considering that this is the biggest Bonsai show ever to be staged staged in Slovenia the organising club Slovenski bonsaj klub did a great job.

My demo with Nik was on a beautiful Mugo Pine that he had collected three years before.

Kevin Willson assisted by Richard Chambers worked a massive Olive and Yew, the Italian talked about a mugo pine that had been fully prepared for him by his assistant.


A full gallery of the trees is to follow. Tomorrow I drive to See Walter Pall and continue on with my European Bonsai Tour

European Tour #3 XVI° CONGRESSO UBI & XXVII° ARCOBONSAI Report

Was it worth driving for 21 hours and 1122 miles (1805 km) one way to participate in a bonsai show? The answer on this occasion is a resounding YES as THIS was no ordinary show. Arco Bonsai Club and UBI invited the cream of Italian (and invited guest… ME!) to the XVI° CONGRESSO UBI and XXVII° ARCOBONSAI.

Almost 100 trees were exhibited with sixty selected to be featured in the annual book. There were a few trees familiar to me but most were new trees that I had not seen before. As you would expect the majority of bonsai were Mediterranean species, Olives, Pines, Junipers and Myrtles however in the show were a few oaks, hawthorns (including mine) and beech. The exhibition was made up of many large and VERY large trees. I counted only 10 trees that were Chuhin or smaller. There was only one display of Shohin. The judging of the trees took EIGHT HOURS and was headed up by Enrico Savini, great care was taken as the previous year a lot of controversy surrounded the selection of prizes.

The venue is the Casinò Municipale (it’s NOT a Casino) in Arco, Trentino which is in the far north just south of the Austrian Border… and what a great venue! The exhibition halls are baroque and very ornate the demo rooms (15 Italian artists all working at the same time) were large and well lit. A huge bonus was a café/bar on site (Superb Coffee 1€) that was the meeting and chilling place for the event. When the sun did shine everyone sat out on the veranda.

Over 45 traders selling all things Bonsai filled the outdoor and the entrance to the show. Noticeably there was the very large amount of Yamadori sellers however the stock on sale was surprisingly poor…any real quality was over 2500€. There was a great selection of potters but NONE from the UK (see my opening sentence) Next year the show is in the south of Italy, this will add a further 800 miles to my journey! But when good coffee is only 1€ I’m not complaining.

European Bonsai Tour #1 report Belgium to Italy and Arco Bonsai

I started my European Tour at 6.00am on Wednesday, made it to the Eurotunnel on time after meeting up with Stone Monkey (this is another blog post to follow). The gods were not looking favourably as the weather for driving was terrible and the ring road around Brussels at rush hour is NOT the best at any time! I arrived at the Noelanders’ Club at 7.25pm only 5 minutes before the start.

Bad weather in Belgium

A ‘friendly’ crowd at The Noelanders Club

It was a good turnout of 60 members considering the weather. I stayed the night with Stéphane Van Lind and his family and the next day held a workshop for six guys. Some nice trees were worked! Then it was a six hour drive to my overnight in Stuttgart.

My GOD the Germans drive fast! So I had to join them. My AVERAGE speed being 105mph sometimes driving at 120mph! At 5.15 am I set off for Arco, I had six hours FAST driving ahead of me, through some beautiful countries.

I had no time to soak in the beauty

Italian Police want to what is in my car

Getting into Italy was ‘interesting’ the Border police wanted to know what I had in my car. As you can imagine they were fascinated… they held me up for 25 minutes, and I was already on a tight schedule. I arrived in at 11.00 with one hour to spare to have my tree registered for the event, and it is from here that I am posting.

Outside the venue at Arco Bonsai

Arco is a beautiful town about 2 miles from Lake Garda in Italy. The venue is in the Municipal Casino (it’s not a casino) I will be posting a full report about the event soon.

Juniper on a rock at Arco

Interview in Slovenski Bonsaj Klub Magazine (including English translation)

I will conclude my European Tour in May as a headline demonstrator at the EBA event in Ljubljana, Slovenia alongside Kevin Willson and Salvatore Liporace.

As part of the build up to the event Tomaž Kovšca interviewed me for the organising club publication. You can Read the original magazine here below is the English translation.

1. You are known as good event organizer, the recently finished Burrs event is becoming one of the most important bonsai event in UK. What is whole idea about Burrs?
I have organised many Bonsai events and Burrs is very personal to me. I recognised that a typical bonsai workshop lasted no more than 6 hours; this is not enough time to work on a big tree if there is one artist and ten participants. So a weekend workshop was the answer. I also invite different artists from across Europe as I believe it important that regular participants get a different perspective on their trees. Burrs is unique as I have 5 bonsai artists all working alongside each other each with complementary skills. Also the weekend is fully accommodated and catered so participants need never leave the venue. Burrs 2012 was the eighth.

2. How do you pick a guests which are invited there?
Visiting artists include: Enrico Savini, Mario Kompsta, Hans van Meer, Kevin Willson, Carlos van der Varrt and Pavel Slovak. Terry Foster is my right hand man. Looking at this list these are some of the best bonsai artists in the western world. I choose artists that I know will fit in with the Burrs formula, are not afraid of hard work (up to 18 hours over the weekend) and who participants ask for!

3. How did Nik Rozman performed? 😉
Nik was a very enthusiastic participant, it helps that he speaks excellent English. I deliberately gave Nik a difficult tree to work with on the first day. Nik impressed many of the other participants with his skill and expertise… I will be considering Nik in the next few years as a PAID visiting artist.

4. In 1995 you were the first runner-up at EBA NTC, was this a real start of your bonsai career? How important do you find such competition as NTC?
In 1995 the final of the EBA NTC included many bonsai artist who your readers will be familiar with including Marco Invernizzi and Tuenis jan Klien so the competition was tough. It was the first time that the NTC had taken place so hopes were high. As for kick-starting my bonsai career the NTC is only an opening door, you must proceed forward, continue to create and innovate, make contacts, work hard and continue to learn. The NTC is simply the beginning… nothing else. However the NTC IS important to showcase talent, the best advice I can offer is do not enter a race unless you know you have a good chance of winning.

5. You are exhibiting your trees in all major bonsai events in Europe. Why do an artist like you travel so many kilometres to exhibit a tree?
In 2011 I travelled to 13 countries in Europe with exhibitions, demonstrations, judging and trading. When I arrive in Ljubljana in 2012 I will have driven over 2000 Km. If you exhibit a tree you are part of the whole experience, not simply an onlooker.

6. Is this important also for your personal development as a bonsaist?
You have the opportunity to have your work critiqued by your peers. Sometimes this can be harsh but useful. I can take it!

7. How serious is bonsai for you?
I spend an average of 6 hours per day on my trees and in my garden. I blog, write and comment online daily about bonsai. I have over 1600 bonsai ‘friends’ on Facebook, I have 8 exhibition trees ready, 25 in development and over 100 yamadori material. Serious is a strange word to use as I have NEVER take bonsai seriously… bonsai is fun and a way of life for me… Oh and I started when I was 25 years old

8. Do you prefer some species? You (as many UK bonsai artists) work a lot on Yews and Hawthorns, do you like any other species?
I only work on native European trees, in particular Yew, Hawthorn and Pine. I have been working with Myrtle and Olive and am very pleased with the results. I am hoping to pick up some Picia and Pistachios on my visit to Slovenia and Croatia in 2012

9. How would you described yourself as bonsaist? Do you have any special technique or approach?
I was once described as a Bonsai rebel (I quite like that) In 1995 I was the ‘young’ guy from the UK who surprised everyone with my NTC result in Monaco. Last year Danny Use was delighted that after all these years I was still passionate about bonsai when so many other had fallen away… I have no intention of ‘falling away’ If I have a ‘mission’ in bonsai it is to teach, this is why I started Burrs and have a School in the UK.

10. In May you are coming to Ljubljana at EBA Convention. This will not be your first visit here, true?
I was in Tacen (Ljubljana) for the Canoe World Championships; I flew out three days before the declaration of independence on 25 June 1991. I was head of UK Press and in the two weeks that I was in Slovenia I fell in love with your beautiful country.

11. In Ljubljana you’ll perform as demonstrator. What are you preparing?
I am not sure what format yet whether a demo or something different. Over the last few years I have given digital presentations based around case studies. My skill is in collecting the tree from the mountains, establishing, developing and finally styling ready for exhibition. An audience needs to be inspired from a speaker, I hope to do this.

British Shohin Association Annual Show 2012 photos and movie

I have just returned home for the BSA Show at Willowbog…Willowbog is in the wilds of Northern England 5 mile along a single track road off the main road network. It took me a total of seven hours travelling to get to the show and what a show. The Quality of display and the excellence of the trees is the best we have ever seen in one show in the UK.

The BSA has really come into its own with the group producing a wonderful event with a great friendly atmosphere. John Armitage and Peter Warren were on hand to offer advice and they gave a ‘trade secrets’ demo/talk in the afternoon. Andy Hardman (who was celebrating his 50th Birthday) gave talk on Accent plants, the room was so full I could not get in!  I also managed to interview two more potter for my potters showcase series.

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