goosetown
Mame
Once again, I think we come to a place where we straddle a fine line.
I think there is much importance and legitimacy in someone expressing their views. Perhaps I was a little less than clear about this. My bad. And by the way, I'm all ears when someone suggests and aesthetic choice that I disagree with as long as they explain it. Again...then I learn something, even if it doesn't change my mind about the subject in particular on which we're speaking.
What I've encountered over and over that's disappointing is the dismissiveness of experts towards myself and others when we're asking a question. Especially when we're asking a practical question. In another forum I once queried about fertilizers, posting a picture of one of my trees. An "expert" answered with, "Before you worry about fertilizer, you might want to be concerned with having something nice enough to fertilize. Write again when you learn how to pinch off new growth." This was three days after I'd received the tree and long before I started toying with it. To make matters worse, a flurry of other posters agreed with him. It was ten posts in before someone bothered to answer my question.
I stopped posting there. Unfortunately, as I said, my nascent endeavors have found this to be the rule as opposed to the exception. Assumptions where questions were more appropriate, rudeness, condescension, etc. Hopefully I've just run into more negativity up front than is typical. There's every chance.
It's the attitude. It's the eye-rolling. It's the fact that some of these people make it clear that they don't have time for my novice questions, but they do have time to tell me EXACTLY what they would have done different with MY tree. Again, these examples can be found as a subset in any interest, hobby, or realm of knowledge. It just seems far more prevalent in bonsai culture, as if some opinions are are intrinsically more precious than others. I probably have more to learn than any bonsaist on the planet. And learning I'm totally game for. But being inexperienced doesn't make me an idiot, and not liking the same things a "master" likes doesn't mean my interests are crap.
Hope it's a little clearer now what I'm getting at; sorry if I was a bit vague before.
I think there is much importance and legitimacy in someone expressing their views. Perhaps I was a little less than clear about this. My bad. And by the way, I'm all ears when someone suggests and aesthetic choice that I disagree with as long as they explain it. Again...then I learn something, even if it doesn't change my mind about the subject in particular on which we're speaking.
What I've encountered over and over that's disappointing is the dismissiveness of experts towards myself and others when we're asking a question. Especially when we're asking a practical question. In another forum I once queried about fertilizers, posting a picture of one of my trees. An "expert" answered with, "Before you worry about fertilizer, you might want to be concerned with having something nice enough to fertilize. Write again when you learn how to pinch off new growth." This was three days after I'd received the tree and long before I started toying with it. To make matters worse, a flurry of other posters agreed with him. It was ten posts in before someone bothered to answer my question.
I stopped posting there. Unfortunately, as I said, my nascent endeavors have found this to be the rule as opposed to the exception. Assumptions where questions were more appropriate, rudeness, condescension, etc. Hopefully I've just run into more negativity up front than is typical. There's every chance.
It's the attitude. It's the eye-rolling. It's the fact that some of these people make it clear that they don't have time for my novice questions, but they do have time to tell me EXACTLY what they would have done different with MY tree. Again, these examples can be found as a subset in any interest, hobby, or realm of knowledge. It just seems far more prevalent in bonsai culture, as if some opinions are are intrinsically more precious than others. I probably have more to learn than any bonsaist on the planet. And learning I'm totally game for. But being inexperienced doesn't make me an idiot, and not liking the same things a "master" likes doesn't mean my interests are crap.
Hope it's a little clearer now what I'm getting at; sorry if I was a bit vague before.