
The view
The Bamboo Ranch
Tucson, Arizona
Just like anyone who makes fly rods from bamboo, we all have more than a passing interest in it. Each time I see a little clump of bamboo here or there, I'm always thinking to myself, "Will this work?" and I look at the structure of the culm. Is it hollow? Can I get the proper length of number of strips? What are the nodes like? Are the branches out of the nodes too invasive? Is the inter-nodal length useful? How dense are the powerfibers? There are a lot of things to think about and each time I see any bamboo, those thoughts start to swirl around.
I enjoy goofing around with this web site and often I'll just place a link I found surfing around online here to share what I've found. I put in a search in google for Arundinaria amabilis and came up with quite a return. I started running down the results and came accross many bamboo enthusiasts and all the bamboo fly rod makers who have web sites and place the lovely reeds name in their content. I was reading a source page where I could find bamboo to grow and voila, there was a nursery in Arizona!
So I called and made an appointment to visit. You can find the content online yourself at this link, that's how I found out about it. Anyway, Tucson is a two hour drive South of Phoenix. I finally got a little time and made the drive this weekend. I was greeted by Matt and I told him my interest in bamboo and why I was there. Matt asked me if I had the book, I assumed he meant "Angler's Bamboo" of which I recieved my own copy from Mrs. Demerest. He said, "That's the one!" and we proceeded to talk about the attributes of Arundinaria Amabilis or otherwise known as Tonkin. One of the things I found interesting as we stood there in his bamboo grove was that I actually owned more Tonkin than he did. We laughed about it and I was thinking to myself, "Well, Shay has a lot more of it than I do..." I really hope to get Mike (you too MGJ) down to the Bamboo Ranch just to see the other types of bamboo.
We began the "tour" through the grounds on a little path that winded around the property. Each type of bamboo was identified by a little metal sign and I was free to take images at my will. He identified two major types of bamboo, running and clumping, it was a discription of how the bamboo spreads. As we walked through and talked about each type of bamboo, Matt would talk about how each plant was used and in it's indigenous country. We talked of bamboo scaffolding, poles for vaulting in the old days, scalpels and of a compression test of 40 - 50 thousand pounds on Bambusa tuldoides...
I asked him if there were other species of bamboo that would have the same characteristics of Tonkin and he spoke of Sinobambusa gigantea of which he had a young run. We took a look at some of the poles that he had stored as well. There are many species that will work for making bamboo fly rods, one must simply decide on which plant to start with and work from there.
One of the reasons why I was there was to grow my own bamboo back at home. Matt told me that bamboo grows easily in Arizona and that I should have no problem growing Tonkin. Bamboo likes warm weather and the major limiting factor in growing bamboo to full maturity is cold. Each of the species on the property were tagged with the coldest temperatures that they could survive. I was given the run down on how to take care of planting and caring for bamboo.
After the tour, I purchased a t-shirt made of 100% bamboo and Matt gave me a hat with their logo. It was a very enjoyable visit and I will go back next time to purchase my plant very soon after I decide which ones that I want to grow at home.
Matt, thank you very much for the enjoyable morning talking about one of my favorite subjects.





Bambusa malingensis - Bambusa Multplex - Bambusa ventricosa - Bambusa tuldoides - culm





Bambusa textilis - node - powerfibers - Phyllostachys nigra punctata - culm





Bambusa dolichomerithalla - Bambusa sp. aff. oldhamii - culm - Bambusa textilis gracilis - clump





Otatea aztecorum aztecorum - Bambusa oldhamii - Phyllostachys aurea - clump - Dendrocalamus strictus





Bambusa dissimulator - Bambusa chungii barbellata - Bambusa balcooa - Bambusa oldhamii - Sinobambusa gigantea





Bambusa boniopsis - Bambusa textilis glabra - Bambusa dolichoclada - Bambusa oldhamii - Bambusa malingensis

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