sorce
Nonsense Rascal
Follow the Pollard Man.
I mean, the truck for real, not on Instagram!
Sorce
I mean, the truck for real, not on Instagram!
Sorce
By wilderness I just mean some some field or a bit of woodland, the closest we'll get in Ireland.There is no wilderness - there is always someone that owns the land and you need permission and unfortunately i dont know any location....
Elm seems to be common enough here, particularly the wych elm in rural ireland (the only native elm), but I've yet to come across hornbeam outside of hedgerows and the occasional garden/park tree. In my (albeit short) experience we have a lot more access to the likes of hawthorn, beech, crab, wild cherry & oak in the 'wilderness'. But as @eryk2kartman has said already, someone always owns the land!Does anyone here know if hornbeams or elms can be found in the Irish wilderness?
It's a shame hornbeams are uncommon here, they are my favourite tree. But at least we have miles of hawthorn, as you said.Elm seems to be common enough here, particularly the wych elm in rural ireland (the only native elm), but I've yet to come across hornbeam outside of hedgerows and the occasional garden/park tree. In my (albeit short) experience we have a lot more access to the likes of hawthorn, beech, crab, wild cherry & oak in the 'wilderness'. But as @eryk2kartman has said already, someone always owns the land!
have you thought about starting with hedging material? all my hornbeams have been from hedging nurseries. same goes for elms, many a great elm has been plucked from a hedgerow.It's a shame hornbeams are uncommon here, they are my favourite tree. But at least we have miles of hawthorn, as you said.
Yes. Your posts have been a great inspiration to me. I'm keeping my eye out for garden centre hornbeams with nice trunks. I have yet to find one though.have you thought about starting with hedging material? all my hornbeams have been from hedging nurseries. same goes for elms, many a great elm has been plucked from a hedgerow.
Hornbeam is a UK native woodland tree of course. you will find them in hedgerows, in fields, in gardens, in forests everywhere
I can't find any soil mixes either! I have to just buy off Amazon.Anyone know where to source bonsai soil mix in Dublin? Or at least pumice, it's a nightmare to find any. I haven't had any luck with the UK websites shipping cheaply to Ireland these days either!
Go to Kerry! It's the most beautiful place in the whole country. And go as soon as you get the jab because it's much nicer there during lockdown when there's no one cars blocking up the roads, preventing you from going to certain areas.I was planning to go to Ireland (the Republic) before the two plagues of the century : Brexit and Covid-19. I've alredy spent a few days in "Norn'Irn", Belfast, Derry and a couple of very nice places, but I'd really love to discover Southern Ireland.
In the days of "folk music", I saw Planxty onstage, at the Bataclan in Paris. Although I I think Irish culture is much more than that, that it's not stuck in the past, a stale vision of who they are, like those of the Brits that voted to "keep the fantasy of the empire great again" huh huh...
I'll have my second jab in July, I'm planning to discover the green island if that bloody pandemic is at last behind...
Go to Kerry!
If you contact bonsai Eejit(he's on Instagram) he can sort you out with everything you might need. I got some mixes from ibuki bonsai in Poland and it worked out a decent price I thought. Urban plant life in city centre also sometimes have akadama but on the expensive side.Anyone know where to source bonsai soil mix in Dublin? Or at least pumice, it's a nightmare to find any. I haven't had any luck with the UK websites shipping cheaply to Ireland these days either!