Tenets of collecting

I drove through Nebraska but I don't remember any trees. The kind of place you could watch your dog run away for three days.
I'll second that. I grew up in northwestern Kansas and North Texas. The plains states are as you describe, for sure. But there are periodic "islands" of trees with potential for decent yamadori.
Here in the high desert? You like mesquite and sagebrush? lol
Out here, your dog gets loose and you only see him for about 100 yards before he either gets lost in the brown-out or tumbled by the wind.
 
What I saw was a rude response to something that I posted.

Aren’t you a writer? Surely you recognize that starting a response like this sets a bad tone for the rest of your comments.

Wouldn’t have collected the first BTW Pretty non descript.
Then you insult my choice of tree to collect.

The second isn’t weird. It’s a common natural form of the tree.
Then, as someone who does not have experience collecting firs, tells me I’m wrong.

Over the years I’ve read many of your posts. There’s some gold in there, but sometimes you come across as blunt or mean. That attitude has finally reached me and I’m not ok with it.
 
Last edited:
What I saw was a rude response to something that I posted.


Aren’t you a writer? Surely you recognize that starting a response like this sets a bad tone for the rest of your comments.


Then you insult my choice of tree to collect.


Then, as someone who does not have experience collecting firs, tells me I’m wrong.

Over the years I’ve read many of your posts. There’s some gold in there, but sometimes you come across as blunt or mean. That attitude has finally reached me and I’m not ok with it.

I told you I don’t know much about collecting fir. I also gave an honest opinion of your tree and you took it as an insult. Fwiw I wouldn’t have collected it. In a post about odd looking trees it Looks pretty non descript to me.

Yes I am blunt. Take it or leave it. I said I’m uninformed and not experienced collecting fir trees so my opinion is hardly worth being insulted about

You seem to have some kind of trigger here for some reason with my advice not to collect odd looking trees. Have from the start. It’s a head scratcher.
 
You seem to have some kind of trigger here for some reason with my advice not to collect odd looking trees. Have from the start. It’s a head scratcher.
Do not misrepresent my opinion. I agree with the advice to an extent.
I agree that there are some oddities that do not go well with popular bonsai styles.

My point was that sometimes odd/unusual trees are worth pursuing and that “weird” lies on a spectrum that varies by species, features, and form. You have proven that by showing what you consider a weird oak.
BTW, here's a photo of my collected live oak. It's very unusual as well for its species. If you're curious I can explain why this tree is uncommon and weird.

To you, the oak is unusual because the form it exhibits is uncommon and weird for that species. That is exactly the point made about the first pictured fir. Instead of recognizing the point, your response was to say it wasn’t worth collecting.
 
I've always appreciated rockm's bluntness. I don't think it was ever intended to be condescending. Even if it were, it's good information—or at least a well-informed opinion.
 
Do not misrepresent my opinion. I agree with the advice to an extent.


My point was that sometimes odd/unusual trees are worth pursuing and that “weird” lies on a spectrum that varies by species, features, and form. You have proven that by showing what you consider a weird oak.


To you, the oak is unusual because the form it exhibits is uncommon and weird for that species. That is exactly the point made about the first pictured fir. Instead of recognizing the point, your response was to say it wasn’t worth collecting.
The movement in the oaks trunk is not weird. It’s a feature on most live oak. What in unusual is WHERE the movement is. Low on the trunk. This was originally a 30 ft tall tree and about 300 years old at collection. The collector recognized the unusual features and why is would look natural as a bonsai.

Weird is indeed on a scale. The challenge is to recognize how that weird/unusual feature can be incorporated into a decent natural looking design

And FWIW I said I wouldn’t have collected it. Doesn’t mean others should or shouldn’t. I just don’t appreciate what you appreciate in it.
 
Last edited:
I've always appreciated rockm's bluntness. I don't think it was ever intended to be condescending. Even if it were, it's good information—or at least a well-informed opinion.
My first year (?) or so here at B-nut, I thought @rockm was kind of... a bit too harsh to want to engage with.

But... when I need cold, hard, real advice, he's my guy. He has great knowledge and experience, is willing to share it with us strangers, and gets nothing in return. @rockm is going to tell you like it is without any sugar coating. There is good value in that.

While he's a bit harsh sometimes, if he says something, it's probably worth consideration. You will make the final decisions on your trees anyways.
 
Plan for your safety

Such an important point, especially when going after material that lives in exposed places. I’ve gotten much closer to dangerously hypothermic collecting trees in the desert than any other time I’ve spent in the backcountry. The wind and weather can really sneak up on you when you’re hyper focused on a rootball.
 
Plan your entry and exit.
Have patience
Plan for your safety
2x GPS
Know the types of wild animals in the area
Learn to identify animal waste

I'm a word Safety
Safety is no accident!

Your short list reminds me of the Fire Orders used in wildland firefighting... safety minded, minus the poop.
 
Plan your entry and exit.
Have patience
Plan for your safety
2x GPS
Know the types of wild animals in the area
Learn to identify animal waste

I'm a word Safety
Great advice even if you’re collecting in a relatively tame area with no large agressive wild animals. Cows and dogs can be a problem for instance. Cows can get you sued if they break a leg inthe hole you didn’t backfill

Also wear heavy work gloves. Poking around under trees exposes your hands to stuf like spiders and possibly venomous snakes. I was collecting trees in East Texas and was poking around under a little scrub oak in the early spring. Pulling leaves away from the trunk at ground level. Pulled up the largest black widow spider I’ve ever seen. And that was among a scorpion or two which are extremely common in many places but get overlooked. This one was hiding in the mailbox among the bills
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0837.jpeg
    IMG_0837.jpeg
    452.1 KB · Views: 6
My biggest risks often were ticks and poison oak.
Back in Massachusetts these things (poison ivy) were enough to keep me on trail most of the time.
Western Washington is bushwhacking heaven in this regard…basically no ticks or poison oak, though there is blowdown, thick brush, spikey plants, and the occasional cougar.
 
I’ve gotten much closer to dangerously hypothermic collecting trees in the desert than any other time I’ve spent in the backcountry. The wind and weather can really sneak up on you when you’re hyper focused on a rootball.
I'll vouch for that! Got a collection permit for Lincoln National Forest a number of years ago to dig a Christmas tree. 60° when I left town with a bright yellow windbreaker, and by the time I got to the search area, the flakes were starting to fall. It was a difference of only about 30 miles as the crow flies, and roughly 2,000' increase in elevation, but a temperature drop of at least 30°. I finally found the perfect tree, and only about 10 minutes in, my fingertips were already burning, even with heavy leather work gloves. After an hour, I had the tree in the truck (2WD, bad idea, but I was obviously unprepared), and maneuvered my way back out of 6" of fresh wet snow.

I suggest high-viz colors as well. There's always a chance someone else is hunting for something other than trees.
Also, make sure you have a vehicle worthy of the roads/trails you will be traveling.

The Piñon didn't survive after the following May. 😥
 
Plan your entry and exit.
Have patience
Plan for your safety
2x GPS
Know the types of wild animals in the area
Learn to identify animal waste

I'm a word Safety

This is probably good advice, but I usually just grab my shovel and saw and walk off into the swamp to see what looks good. Sometimes I'll remember to put shoes on.
 
Back
Top Bottom