This is the 15th year of continuous daily publication for 365Caws. All things considered, it's likely it will be the last year as it is becoming increasingly difficult for me to find interesting material. However, I hope that I may have inspired someone to a greater curiosity about the natural world with my natural history posts, or encouraged a novice weaver or needleworker. If so, I've done what I set out to do.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Ahead Of The Jays
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Litter Pickers
It pleases me to say that everything went smoothly because this project was my "baby" from the seminal thought to the execution of this first patrol. Through the Volunteer Program office, I made contact with the State Dept. of Transportation to negotiate an agreement which was acceptable to both them and us. With National Public Lands Day shortly to come up on the calendar, we had to move fairly quickly to have everything in place today. Last week, I took delivery of State-supplied bags, signage and a training video, and then rounded up the remainder of our gear from various offices in the Park. Safety vests and long-armed grabbers were distributed among four "knots" of workers (three people to a knot), and in four and a half hours, the teams worked diligently to be certain each half-mile section of a two-mile length of highway was immaculately litter-free. A few hazardous items were marked for special pickup by the DoT.
Art students, the two young men (Taylor and Jude) kneeling to the left of me in the image drew the short straw and now know far more about native plants than they expected to learn during a trash pickup. That said, both entered the information in their personal journals and accompanied the descriptions with beautiful pen-and-ink illustrations of the plants pointed out to them. They also sketched owl, flicker and crow feathers in great detail. I was also thoroughly amused by the fact that they assigned a sound to each "species" of litter as it was dropped into the bag.
All in all, I couldn't have asked for a better group of Volunteers. Thanks, gang! It's a dirty job, but somebody's gotta do it.
Friday, September 28, 2012
Not Lerner And Loewe
So what was special about Lerne...excuse me, Leopold and Loeb? The trivia question was this: "What famous ornithologist was sentenced to life imprisonment for murder in 1924?" The pair were convicted of the murder of a 14-year old boy. Nathan Leopold died while serving his sentence, but Richard Loeb was released after 33 years' imprisonment and went back into his chosen field of study, ornithology. He is known primarily for his research into the bird species of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Ethiopian Basket
During the years she ministered to the impoverished and spiritually needy, she sent home a few handcrafted items, one of which was this sewing basket which in my own childhood was still brightly colored. My mother was rather casual about where she kept it, and thus the lid became badly sun-faded. The interior is still bright (perhaps not as bright as it once was), and now I keep it out of strong light, still using it as a container for sewing supplies and small projects. Although I never knew Daisy, the memories of her which my mother imparted to me always rise when I lift the lid.
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Successful Carnivores
When I first purchased these three plants (two Pitcher Plants and one Sundew), they had very few heads. Apparently they've enjoyed a diet of mosquitoes, flies and other hapless insects because they have really burgeoned into a lush bowlful of exotic shapes. A month or so ago, our resident buck cropped the tops of several of them only to discover that they didn't taste as good as he had hoped. I hung a string of bells to further deter any unwanted samplings, and the plants sprang back with amazing vigor. It's nice to step out onto the back porch, knowing that my "guard-plants" are on watch for those pesky mosquitoes!
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Inner Workings
Here you see the inner workings of the pluviometer (the inset shows the device with the collection chamber reinstalled). Rain drips through a hole in the collector until it fills one of the two identical cups at the ends of the rocker arm, triggering a sensor and dumping the water into a drain hole on either end. There is a gap beneath the base plate and the mounting board to allow the water to run off unobstructed, and each cup hold precisely 0.01" of rain. The data accumulated by the pluviometer is transmitted to the station's readout in the house, so there is no need for me to go out in the rain. Occasionally, I have to take leaves and/or fir needles out of the collection basin to allow the rainwater to run freely through the drip hole, but otherwise, there is no maintenance to be performed on this device.
Monday, September 24, 2012
Adopt-A-Highway
My thanks goes out to everyone who helped make this project possible. Without your cooperation and assistance, it couldn't have happened. Let's hear it for those wonderful Volunteers who give their time and effort to Mount Rainier National Park!
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Pointwork And Needle-Hitching
This type of marlinespike seamanship is largely decorative, and is a dying art despite its close relation to macramé. The techniques are discussed in detail in the "Ashley Book of Knots." From the top of the sheath near the dagger hilt, you see a turk's-head executed in artificial leather cord, two sections of common underhand needle-hitching separated by a panel of Carrick bends, and then two turk's-heads spaced at either end of a long pointwork section. The cord used in the body of the work is nylon. None of the knots/hitches shown here is particularly difficult to do, but in combination, they become a piece of fancywork any good pirate would covet.
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Grommet Practice
To make a grommet, you take a length of rope three times the circumference and then some and carefully unlay it until you have three strands of single-ply material. Each one will be used to create a single grommet. Using the center of the length as the bottom-most point of the circle, bring the ends together at the top and lay them across each other. Following the lay of the rope, re-ply taking each end in the opposite direction until both come back to the starting point. You should have extra length to work with at this point. Separate each strand into two equal parts and tie the middle two in a simple knot. Work these two "tails" back into the grommet with a short splice and then trim all four ends close to the surface of the lay. If desired, roll the grommet until the bristly bits of the ends are to the inside. There ya go! In no time at all, you'll have a whole handful of little rope circles which, if you'd thought about it beforehand, you could have joined in imitation of the Olympic Rings. Hindsight...it's always clearer than foresight!
Friday, September 21, 2012
Performance Art
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Real, Alive And On My Hand
Footnote: Careful analysis of what little text is visible shows "...ror Scorpion" below the rear leg. That was my clue to this chap's identity. He is an Emperor Scorpion, Pandinus imperator, and his sting is categorized as "mild to severe in sensitive individuals." I'm usually one of those "sensitive individuals."
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Sister-Foe
This feud, now...it goes back a long ways t' when these two wuz dressed by they's mum in pink satin and ruffles (wot, y'might imagine, they both despised, a-bein' o' the piratin' nature from early on), fer it was Kat Corbye wot made folk believe she were 'er own sister, an' gettin' blame laid on the backside o' the Black Blade wi' a strop fer the mischief she'd be about. An' the two o' 'em were sich rivals that when Black Blade shipped out in th' cargo 'old o' a vessel bound fer Tortuga at age o' twelve that naught would 'ave it but Kat Corbye follered suit an' weaseled 'er way inter bein' cabin boy fer a cap'n wi' a shady reputation, conked 'im cold an' chucked 'im overboard a fortnight out. Blood were spilled next time th' two met, an' Black Blade 'as sworn she be a-goin' t' flay Kat Corbye alive wi' cat-o-nine-tails afore she keelhauls 'er an' leaves 'er wi' cannibals, 'er wretched ship on th' bottom in some uncharted cove.
Black Blade (for it be she wot's stronger an' quicker) will no' be lettin' Kat Corbye sully 'er name on this day of all days! 'Twas a certain mischance that th' two o' 'em put into same port 'ere, commencin' t' fight t' th' death, I'll warrant, lest that plaguey sister o' mine slinks back t' 'eal 'er wounds in th' bilge where she belongs.
International Talk Like A Pirate Day
Day 351: Ahoy, mates! Today be International Talk Like A Pirate Day, and if ye think I be tellin' a fib or 'avin' a little fun wi' ye, ye'd best be Googlin'. Fer th' occasion, I'll be bringin' ye a Special Edition o' 365 Caws an' addin' to it o'er th' day. 'Oist th' mainsail, lads! We're off on a adventure!
Set ye down, me buckos, fer 'ere's th' tale ye've been a-waitin' t' 'ear, o' th' day the Black Blade pirated th' Interceptor. Aye, ye might not be knowin' o' that vessel by th' name wot she's called today, but I be tellin' th' truth of it when I sez she were th' same tall ship wot once sailed under command o' that Cap'n Jack Sparrow lad ye might o' 'eard of. Fer the nonce, she be th' brig Lady Washington, an' on a fine, fair day at end o' August, she left port o' Kirkland t' wage in battle ag'inst th' topsail ketch, Hawaiian Chieftain, th' Black Blade among 'er passengers.
There were some thinkin' an' strategizin' goin' on in me 'ead, fer th' Black Blade allus likes t' be on th' winnin' side. Would not be a-furtherin' me career as pirate if I be sunk untimely. Aye, I'd be needin' to take measure o' me chosen vessel's crew an' cap'n afore makin' a move t' seize 'er. I be a-bidin' o' me time 'ere, innercent as newborn babe, an' plottin' th' whiles as crew goes 'bout they duty. We put out right smartly, an' cap'n none th' wiser that 'e 'ad a pirate in 'is midst.
Seas were calm on that day an' wind barely breathin'. Two mile out, we sighted th' foe bearin' down on us, 'er sails coaxin' all possible speed out'n the fiddly breeze, unfortunate at our disadvantage. She come alongside us an' got off two volleys wot did us no 'arm, but our cap'n couldna bring our guns to bear 'fore she were out o' range o' anythin' but pow'ful curse-words wot the crews was flingin' one at t'other heavy. We stood apart from 'er as wind died an' left us both dead in th' water. Then, as luck would 'ave it, our sails filled an' 'ers did not. We came 'round sharp an' cap'n cried, "Down 'er length, Madame Gunner!" Cannon an' swivel brought t' bear, the Chieftain 'ad not a chance fer another single shot as we peppered 'er repeatedly wi' fire.
Th' battle over and th' ship sound an' whole, th' Black Blade whispered a few sweet an' pointed words in cap'n's ear an' the man stood down an' let me 'ave th' tiller. "Let bloody crew sort it out amongst 'em," sez I, "an' th' Black Blade takes best o' the spoils. 'Tis a pirate's life fer me! Yo-ho!"
She be a square topsail ketch, th' Hawaiian Chieftain, fer all th' good it did 'er when she sailed inter battle wi' us on this day. T' be sure, she 'ad th' advantage o' first two shots fired, but then th' fickle, fiddly wind went dead calm an' left us both standin'. T'were nought cap'n could do save wait, an' when she rose ag'in, th' wind favored us. Our gunner brought swivel and cannon t' bear an' ne'er gave 'er a chance, though t' give 'em credit, 'er crew were a valiant lot 'neath 'eavy fire. But on this day, 'twere the Interceptor...beggin' yer pardon, the Lady Washington wot was the victor. Bring the grog topside, lads, an' give them as met Davey Jones in this battle a 'earty "Huzzah!"
There were some thinkin' an' strategizin' goin' on in me 'ead, fer th' Black Blade allus likes t' be on th' winnin' side. Would not be a-furtherin' me career as pirate if I be sunk untimely. Aye, I'd be needin' to take measure o' me chosen vessel's crew an' cap'n afore makin' a move t' seize 'er. I be a-bidin' o' me time 'ere, innercent as newborn babe, an' plottin' th' whiles as crew goes 'bout they duty. We put out right smartly, an' cap'n none th' wiser that 'e 'ad a pirate in 'is midst.
Th' battle over and th' ship sound an' whole, th' Black Blade whispered a few sweet an' pointed words in cap'n's ear an' the man stood down an' let me 'ave th' tiller. "Let bloody crew sort it out amongst 'em," sez I, "an' th' Black Blade takes best o' the spoils. 'Tis a pirate's life fer me! Yo-ho!"
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Onion Rock
Monday, September 17, 2012
Common Seaman's Ditty Bag - Work In Progress
You may notice that I'm using a curved needle here. This is helpful in keeping the overcast stitches uniform on both the front and the back of the work. The straight seam behind the overcasting was worked with a three-sided sailmaker's needle. It's always best to have the proper tool for the job, and of course a good sewing kit was an essential piece of equipment which the old-time sailor stowed in his ditty bag. No off-the-shelf items in those days! Even the ship's ropes were made on board, re-spun from fibers salvaged from worn-out lines.
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Ashley No. 2242, Prolong Knot
The Prolong Knot is so named because it may be extended indefinitely by adding additional bights in multiples of three. The minimum number of bights for a Prolong is four; subsequent additions give 7, 10, 13 and so on. It is a fairly simple knot to double (here doubled three times) for a nice doorstep mat. "Doubled three times?" you ask. "Don't you mean quadrupled?" No, doubling is the term for retracing the route of the rope, and each time the rope repeats its path, it is said to be "doubled again," thus when four complete circuits have been made, it is said to have been "doubled three times" (the original knot and three repetitions).
This particular mat measures 18" x 9" and required forty feet of 3/8" sisal rope to manufacture. It took about two hours to complete. A single knot is worked loosely at first, and then as it is doubled and redoubled, excess rope must be worked out until it is nicely formed and lays flat. Upon completion, the raw ends of the rope are seized (wrapped) and stitched into place on the reverse. In more compact work, a pointed metal tool called a marlinespike (marlinspike or marlingspike) is used to adjust the rope, hence the name "marlinespike seamanship," i.e., the sailor's art of knot-tying. There are a number of books available on the subject, but the Ashley Book of Knots is considered to be the ultimate reference.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Icon Of The Pacific Northwest
Friday, September 14, 2012
Smoke Haze
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Transition
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Prairie Driftwood
When we took over the homestead from them, the Doug Firs Grandpa had planted on the property stood 60-80 feet tall. As he had done before us, we kept the property free of Scotch Broom by religiously hand-pulling any we found growing. After one season of trying to garden with rain-barrel water, I gave up, preferring to listen to the gentle "shelm" instead of the sound of my hoe hitting rock after rock.
Today, Yelm is a burgeoning "bedroom community" for Olympia. The "shelm" is drowned out by cars. Our old homestead has been timbered and divided, and a well was sunk by one of the several successive owners who weathered far less years on the prairie than the eighteen we endured with no conveniences. Yet when I return to the prairie, I feel a twinge of homesickness. The house looks the same on the outside and the trees are growing back, but the "shelm" is audible only on the windiest of days, blowing ghosts of another era through the tall grass.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Dooty Station
You have to admit it isn't every day you get a tour of dooty at an interpretive display!
Monday, September 10, 2012
Get Your Happy On
I am attending the Fair this year in three capacities: as an ordinary visitor who loves the exhibits, as an exhibitor in the International Photographic Salon, and as a representative of Mount Rainier National Park at our booth in the Outdoors Building. I have certainly "got my happy on."
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Garden Lace
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Where The Booty Is Hidden
The Well-Dressed Brigand
Friday, September 7, 2012
September Light
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Grass Of Parnassus, Parnassia Fimbriata
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
Bends And Buttons
To tie a Chinese button in the hand generally requires a bit more cord length than I allowed here, and the finished knot can be positioned before the running end is trimmed by working out the surplus in either direction. These functional knots are often found on traditional Chinese clothing, as the name implies, and are frequently doubled (two turns using the same cord) to make a larger version.
If you're interested in doing serious knotwork, I highly recommend "The Ashley Book of Knots." It covers everything from simple hitches to marlingspike seamanship, and will provide you plenty of ideas for projects utilizing ornamental knotwork.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Friends For Half A Century
We shared a lot of interests in those days: reading, studying, music (she was an accomplished clarinetist) and fishing, a sport which we pursued unchaperoned at a rent-a-cabin on a distant lake as often we could. In those days, my spirit of adventure was just as strong as it is now, and it never once occurred to me that my offsider might not feel the same way. I led camping trips and midnight piscatorial excursions in a "borrowed" rowboat, and sallies into neighboring blueberry patches and vegetable gardens when our expedition fare ran out. Marilyn tagged along, compelled (I realize now) by her mothering instincts to keep an eye on me lest I get into too deep trouble.
Perhaps the most memorable of our "survival" trips took place in a pelting downpour. We'd pitched a tarp and spread our bedrolls expecting to camp for two nights under starry skies. Alas, in the Pacific Northwest, there's no assurance of dry weather, and by midnight of the first night, the rain was coming down in sheets. Upon arising in the morning, we got a small fire going; not enough to warm us or dry us out, but sufficient to cook some Bisquick dough wrapped around a stick. Foresight, y'know...if you're going to be thrust into a survival situation, you should be well provisioned, at least for your first meal. After our meagre breakfast, the work of the day began. The hunter-gatherers needed to hunt and gather or go hungry at dinnertime. It was late in the year, if memory serves, and we were a long way from water and our skill at catching perch was worth nothing as far as filling our bellies. We created a few snares in the hopes of catching a squirrel or rabbit (not that either of us would have known what to do with it if it had stumbled into one of them). We cast about for edible fruits, nuts and berries (a subject on which I was knowledgeable) and came up with only one food source: the fruit of Mahonia nervosa, the Oregon Grape.
Oregon Grape is no relation to true grapes. It resembles a low-lying holly plant (thorny!) and bears a cluster of pencil-eraser sized tart, seedy and altogether unappetizing fruit. We gathered these in number and ate handsful raw, and then began trying to figure out some other way of rendering them edible. In the end, we speared them on tiny sticks and heated them over the fire for our evening repast and again for breakfast the following morning. The rain had not let up, so at last we retreated from our "survival expedition" to my house, a hundred yards from camp.
Marilyn is the mother of four and a grandmother of one. She does not have an outdoorsy bone in her body. Years ago, she set down a rule: if I don't talk about mountains, she won't talk about kids. We both slip from time to time, but the friendship remains solid as a rock, despite what I put that poor girl through.
Footnote: the card was given to me by her during our first year of friendship, and the Buddha was a gift for my 16th birthday.
Monday, September 3, 2012
Splicing An Eye
This shot also gives me a chance to show off the Black Blade's new 'at, a fine genuine leather tricorn handstitched by James the Cordwainer. Ye'd best be gettin' used ter pirates in me photostream, most 'specially in t'month o' September.
Sunday, September 2, 2012
Missed One!
It is always a battle with the browsers here. You wouldn't call them aggressive, but they're only a pinch shy of it, brazenly walking on my back porch steps to get 'round the various lines and noisemakers I've hung to deter them. Nor is it that they're short of natural food, though I have to agree that a tender, juicy tomato is better fare than crackly grass and withering ferns. What baffles me is why they are even eating "deer-resistant" species such as hostas and crocosmia. Frustrating, but at least this year, I can say I got a crop (loosely termed) of tomatoes.