Showing posts with label Cris Peck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cris Peck. Show all posts

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Eatonville Salmon Fest


Day 4: Eatonville's Salmon Fest may not be the biggest event on the calendar, but there's no admission fee and for its size, there are loads of fun activities. Immediately adjacent to our Nisqually Land Trust booth, you could have a henna application or get your face painted, or you could make a salmon print on paper or a t-shirt (100% cotton shirts available for purchase at $8 for adult sizes, or you could bring your own). Both Cris and I opted to buy shirts on site (mine is the black one). Prints were free.

I don't imagine you've heard of salmon printing before, but you may have heard of leaf printing, i.e., art made by applying paint to a leaf and then transferring it by pressing the painted surface to paper. Salmon printing follows the same principle, only instead of a leaf, you use a salmon. Yeah, that's what I said...a salmon, a real one. Hatchery fish, previously frozen, were supplied for the purpose, and the same fish were used throughout the day. Prospective salmon-print artists lined up four to six deep at times to dab tempera or textile paint on dead fish with sponge applicators or small paintbrushes, and then with the help of an assistant at the booth, the "canvas" of paper or cloth was patted gently, moulding it to the fish's body. The resultant prints were then hung to dry. When done on fabric, the print must be ironed to set the paint before washing. It's not often that you get to take home a one-of-a-kind souvenir from a fair!

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Restoration Planting


Day 147: In addition to my regular routine of walking and riding the exercise bike, today I spent three hours planting over fifty Douglas fir and Cascara saplings in a field of rocks and mud. The project was part of the Nisqually Land Trust's efforts toward restoring natural habitat in Ohop Valley. Several old barns and outbuildings were removed from this site last fall, and the concrete slab foundations were broken into chunks with bulldozers and were then left to lay until funding could be found for removal of the debris. That work was completed a few weeks ago. It will take several more sessions such as this one before the site is completely replanted. In a few years' time, this area will present a very different aspect, and will again be home to many species of wildlife and birds.