This
article was originally published on the ABBA website quite a few
years
ago, right at the start of my time at Shunkaen back in 2003.
Some of the
views expressed are slightly naïve, but some I still hold
today. An interesting look back at the beginning of it all...

My
name
is Peter Warren and I am currently working as an apprentice at Shunkaen
on the
outskirts of Tokyo.
For those that don’t know, Shunkaen is the name of Kunio
Kobayashi’s bonsai
garden, and he is considered to be one of the top bonsai artists in Japan,
and by
implication, the world. I have been here full time for going on six
months now
and I am starting to get to grips with the hard work, long hours, near
constant
watering and general insanity that is my everyday life. I contacted ABBA to say hello and
offer any help
I could to the British bonsai world and I was asked
to write about me
and my
experiences...
I’m
24 years old and come from North Yorkshire, but had the
misfortune to be
born in High Wycombe,
where I stayed long
enough to start watching the local football team, Wycombe Wanderers,
who are
tragically doomed to tedious obscurity. I’m a simple bloke
really, Beer, Birds,
Football and Bonsai. At
the moment
however, not in that order. I
have no previous bonsai experience to speak of, except for seeing
them in
shops, books and (laughably so in hindsight) Karate Kid III. That said
I have
always had an interest in all things green, working in a horticultural
nursery
during University holidays and a bit of gardening on the side. I also
enjoy
getting very dirty, and hate wearing a suit, so a desk job was never
going to
be my cup of tea, but why bonsai? The most difficult question to answer
and one
I couldn’t even begin to try and put into words. But I should
try...
I studied Physics with
Astrophysics at Leicester University,
managing to
scrape through by the skin of my teeth, almost entirely through lack of
effort
on my part, being far too easily distracted by my Playstation, the
local and
the snooker hall. I
chose to study Physics because I
wanted to
understand how
the universe worked on both the infinitely large and minutely small
scale, how
everything came together and worked together in harmony; and I thought
it would
be a challenge. It was in fact quite so, but one that I decided not to
try that
hard at overcoming, mainly because I could only see myself wearing a
shirt and
tie, sat in front of a computer screen worrying over the debugging
process of
some pointless program I'd written.
After
four years of it, I was ready to cast it
all off and follow my
heart
rather than the over bearing obligation to go to University to get an
education
because I could. If only my even more over bearing student loans were
so easy
to be rid of.
Obviously
I was too much of a
coward to follow my
heart all in one
step
so I became
an English
Teacher in Japan,
thus
putting off any bullet biting for another year. No
offence to English
Teachers
intended, but it was a joke. I despised it and all that it entails in
Japan.
I do know
some very
nice people, who teach,
but they are the exceptions rather than the rule and I shall leave it
at that. It
wasn’t all bad, I did get to experience the
serene insanity of Japan,
meet nice people,
drink plenty of beer, watch England
against Sweden
in the World Cup along with any Japanese domestic league game I could
get to;
and most importantly
I was introduced into the Bonsai world...