Monday, August 23, 2010

cairns in the wild



i've been meaning to blog about this for some time - a friend of mine recently contributed photographs of cairns for an exhibit at the local library, which i got to see - lovely photos of rocks stacked and piled in all sorts of places...

here's what wikipedia.org has to say about CAIRNS:

little cairns & stream/photo by tjgoogins 2010/all rights reserved

A cairn (carn in Irish, carnedd in Welsh, càrn in Scots Gaelic) is a human-made pile of stones, often in conical form. They are usually found in uplands, on moorland, on mountaintops, or near waterways.
In modern times cairns are often erected as landmarks. In ancient times they were erected as sepulchral monuments, or used for practical and astronomical uses.

They are built for several purposes:

* They may mark a burial site, and may memorialize the dead.
* They may mark the summit of a mountain.
* Placed at regular intervals, they indicate a path across stony or barren terrain or across glaciers.
* The Inuit erect human-shaped cairns, or inunnguaq as milestones or directional markers in the Canadian Arctic.
* In North America, cairns may mark buffalo jumps or "drive lanes."[citation needed]
* In North America, cairns may be used for astronomy.[citation needed]
* In Norse Greenland, cairns were used as a hunting implement to direct reindeer towards cliffs[1]
* In the Canadian Maritimes cairns were used as lighthouse-like holders for fires that guided boats, as in the novel The Shipping News.
* In North America, cairns are often petroforms in the shapes of turtles or other animals.[citation needed]
* In the United Kingdom, they are often large Bronze Age structures which frequently contain burial cists
* In parks exhibiting fantastic rock formations, such as the Grand Canyon, tourists often construct simple cairns in reverence of the larger counterparts.[citation needed]
* They may have a strong aesthetic purpose, for example in the art of Andy Goldsworthy.
* They may be used to commemorate events: anything from a battle site, to the place where a cart tipped over.
* Some are merely places where farmers have collected stones removed from a field.

They vary from loose, small piles of stones to elaborate feats of engineering. In some places, games are regularly held to find out who can build the most beautiful cairn.[citation needed] Cairns along hiking trails are often maintained by groups of hikers adding a stone when they pass.

as for these, my friend and i saw them in the woods when we went for a walk one day this summer (or was it back in the spring?) anyway, cairns are cool - which reminds me, i want to create a walkable labyrinth in my back yard - more on that next time!

until my next blog... "love the life you live - live the life you love"





Saturday, August 21, 2010

mermaid's necklace



this is a page from a wonderful book, Arthur Spiderwick's Field Guide to the Fantastical World Around You by Tony DiTerlizzi and Holly Black - it shows what a mermaid would make to wear (various found objects like sea urchin spines and shells and things floating in the ocean, strung together with pieces of fishing nets)

so i got some hemp twine and wrapped some shells and stones and sea urchin spines and made my version (still might add a shark's tooth or a few more pearls to it)

it's not for everyone, but i do get some nice comments when i wear it...

that's it for now - i'm off to work - enjoy the weekend!!

where's chippy?







an earlier post showed us chippy the chipmunk in his natural habitat - sitting on a stone wall, nibbling on something, showing general disdain for his/her viewing audience (me and the cats, who spied him/her first)

a short time after that episode of chippy tv, i happened to hear some rustling in the black raspberry bush where a few dried-up berries were still visible deep inside (a place no birds had dared to tread) and when i looked closer, i saw chippy high up in the dang bush, hanging upside down, a** over teakettle, being very "stealth" so i wouldn't see him/her! i sprinkled some sunflower seeds on the sidewalk next to the bush and sure enough he/she found them and stuffed them all in his/her cheeks and took them home with him/her as quick as ever he/she could

twice now, we have seen him/her in the evergreen bushes in front of the house - we think he/she is eating some berries (possibly bittersweet berries, which are coming on now, or whatever little berries the bush itself puts out) so here are a few snaps of our industrious little chippy, hard at work, cute as a button... and of course, he/she got rewarded with more sunflower seeds (chipmunks are small striped ground squirrels, so they dig and climb just like regular squirrels, but i've just never seen one cavort in the bushes like this one!) and now, the latest episode of chippy tv: (photos - chippy/tjgoogins 2010/all rights reserved

i'll be back with a few photos of recent crafts & jewelry projects - and an update on how the upstairs sorting is going (hint: real slow, no visible results, but order will prevail)