Good for you. I am a creature of habit, and when I settled into a menu that worked, I easily stuck with it. It gets tougher when traveling, but I have found places and items on the menu that work. I did a program called Ideal Protein, basically a clean Keto diet, which was really restricted. No starch, grains, sugars, low fat, no fruit, juice, booze, or even veggies like carrots, beets, legumes, and tomatoes. I’ve relaxed a bit on the veggies since, but with exercise, I’m maintaining.
I have had to have 4 suits altered, dumped 5 trash bags of clothes at consignment and Salvation Army, and gradually bought a whole new wardrobe, which is expensive but rewarding. Kinda like a new Shimpaku, but not as fun.
Back on topic, yes. As little time as I have to work on trees, they (selfishly) need to be mine. And since it’s just a 3-hour drive door to door, it’s relatively easy to load up the car. Bjorn has plenty of material to work on, and he is not at all reserved about setting a $10k tree in front of a newbie and putting them to work on whatever task needs to be performed.
I’d rather work on JBP and Shimpaku than Pondys and RMJs, but he is intently focused on native species. The longer I keep RMJ surviving my climate, the more tempted I’ll be to buy one. Though I prefer the Japanese varieties.