sorce
Nonsense Rascal
It's easy to stray from the visual mission.
Just a while ago, I was looking for scale on my little naked Ben, an easy enough task. Then I got caught up in the petioles of cut leaves falling off, and lost my place, in the systematic search for scale.
Sucks to have to start over.
How to remain focused on the one task?
Since other tasks certainly get in the way, if not also dealt with. Systematically.
Objective?
Understand how these unmanaged tasks may get in the way, or cloud the vision of, that all important eye. The design eye. The ability to, "see the tree".
Much of it is meditative.
There is a discipline required.
It's cyclical, with an absolute starting point that fluctuates.
I think it is as simple as.....
Obtain material.
Remove what is not the "tree".
Smartprune what is left to Proper Nexts.
Wait.
(Everything we will further talk about)
Guide the tree into future design by continuing to remove what is not the tree, and Smartpruning what's left back to Proper Nexts.
Horticultural Timing depends on your calendar. I'm coming up with a universal calender to use.
There is another section of timing, Design Timing, that is to allow for appropriate thicknesses, and divisions, before cutting.
The separation of these 2 timings is never spoke of, that's why our trees suck in general. We don't pay attention to the next level of detail.
I think each task before the next, is poking us in our Third Eye, and in trying to move through the cycle so fast, we don't execute anything appropriately.
So if we fix each one before, in its entirety, we will begin to see easier.
I have been attempting to keep my scale search eye focused and systematic, by holding the tree from one angle, and searching the entire tree, from four low angles and four high. Then going over each branch individually from the same, or appropriate 8 angles. This way I'm sure nothing is left.
I think searching a dry tree is easier, since scale shines a bit. Though both a dry search, and a wet search could be useful.
Of course, centipedes in the soil to eat the crawler stage scale.
Do you have a systematic approach to anything?
Ever get distracted?
If the unfinished task of falling petioles poke a third eye...
What things poke our design eye?
There has to be things that break our focus when trying to "see the tree".
Also, since "seeing the tree" is usually met with no great sense of urgency, it doesn't get the focus it deserves.
I also believe it doesn't deserve any focus.
Since "remove what is not the tree", can be absolutely anything, and still turn out good if we understand good branching, and "smartprune the rest back to Proper nexts".
In Complication, we'll find Simplicity.
Say Everything.
Sorce
Just a while ago, I was looking for scale on my little naked Ben, an easy enough task. Then I got caught up in the petioles of cut leaves falling off, and lost my place, in the systematic search for scale.
Sucks to have to start over.
How to remain focused on the one task?
Since other tasks certainly get in the way, if not also dealt with. Systematically.
Objective?
Understand how these unmanaged tasks may get in the way, or cloud the vision of, that all important eye. The design eye. The ability to, "see the tree".
Much of it is meditative.
There is a discipline required.
It's cyclical, with an absolute starting point that fluctuates.
I think it is as simple as.....
Obtain material.
Remove what is not the "tree".
Smartprune what is left to Proper Nexts.
Wait.
(Everything we will further talk about)
Guide the tree into future design by continuing to remove what is not the tree, and Smartpruning what's left back to Proper Nexts.
Horticultural Timing depends on your calendar. I'm coming up with a universal calender to use.
There is another section of timing, Design Timing, that is to allow for appropriate thicknesses, and divisions, before cutting.
The separation of these 2 timings is never spoke of, that's why our trees suck in general. We don't pay attention to the next level of detail.
I think each task before the next, is poking us in our Third Eye, and in trying to move through the cycle so fast, we don't execute anything appropriately.
So if we fix each one before, in its entirety, we will begin to see easier.
I have been attempting to keep my scale search eye focused and systematic, by holding the tree from one angle, and searching the entire tree, from four low angles and four high. Then going over each branch individually from the same, or appropriate 8 angles. This way I'm sure nothing is left.
I think searching a dry tree is easier, since scale shines a bit. Though both a dry search, and a wet search could be useful.
Of course, centipedes in the soil to eat the crawler stage scale.
Do you have a systematic approach to anything?
Ever get distracted?
If the unfinished task of falling petioles poke a third eye...
What things poke our design eye?
There has to be things that break our focus when trying to "see the tree".
Also, since "seeing the tree" is usually met with no great sense of urgency, it doesn't get the focus it deserves.
I also believe it doesn't deserve any focus.
Since "remove what is not the tree", can be absolutely anything, and still turn out good if we understand good branching, and "smartprune the rest back to Proper nexts".
In Complication, we'll find Simplicity.
Say Everything.
Sorce