Open your eyes

Newfoundland Knife Box

Because he is an incredibly talented and thoughtful man, my cousin Vernie made me a Newfoundland knife box.  It was crafted, he explained, from left over butternut that he built the THO table from.  I myself had never heard of one of these and I have since googled it and was not able to find such a thing on the internet.  This is either owing to my terrible googling skills or that they are something that long ago went out of fashion.  Vernie makes all sorts of really cool reproduction stuff like this: games, grind stones, tools and loads of beautiful objects.  I expect that he read about these knife boxes in a history book at one time, and just decided to give it a whirl.

I have not tried using it yet, but I will tell you what is is for and how it works.

Newfoundland Knife Box

This is specifically designed to be brought out on a fishing boat and it is used to sharpen knifes.  On the back there is a hole that slides over a nail head and then drops down about an inch over the head.  This allows the heavy box to stay level even when the boat is not level.  The box itself is kept heavy because it is filled with sand.  When one wants to use it you lay it down and the sand falls down on the long board.

Ready to use

The long hardwood board with the sand on it becomes the surface in which the knife is sharpened.   Apparently you just whet the knife in the sand the same way as you would a whet stone.

Anyone ever seen one of these?

Vernie always make the coolest, most beautiful and interesting stuff!  He is going to brand it for me next time I am home.  😀

UPDATE: Look what I found tonight!  Only $450 for an old one.  I wonder what a new one is worth?

Welsh knife box

Since I am writing on a nautical theme, I will share that I was at the waterfront today in Hamilton, Ontario.  Something HUGE there!  At 220 metres long and 23 metres wide it is hard to miss! I snuck up the the ladder to the top and stood on the deck of the big ship Algoma Quebecois. I wonder how many Tiny Houses would fit on this?  It is over 73 times longer than THO.

Laura and the not so tiny boat

Categories: Off Grid, Ontario, Open your eyes, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario, View | Tags: , , , | 7 Comments

Wichtelhütte

Wichtelhütten Ontario

A message came through via email yesterday.  Richard, a friend from Germany, was hoping to get a photo from Canada.  The photo is for some sort of a competition.  Although it is not clear exactly what it is about he needed an image from as far away geographically from Germany as possible and the photo has to have the word Wichtelhütte in it.

Wichtelhütte means gnome house or little people house.  The irony that I live (~half the year) in a Tiny House with a bunch of Gnomes placed in the surrounding forest was not lost on me.  How could I resist?

I enjoyed a wonderful Solstice at my Wichtelhütte, a Norse Yule with friends in Kingston, Christmas with my sister and her family in the countryside, and today a smooth trip back to Hamilton to have a further holiday celebration with family here.

My days are currently filled with fun stuff to do with people who hold great meaning to me, and lots of wonderful things to eat too.  Life is great!

No matter how you choose to spend the last days of December 2012 I hope that you have enjoyed days as wonderful as those I have shared with my loved ones.

Wichtelhütten

Categories: Off Grid, Ontario, Open your eyes, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario, View | Tags: , | 12 Comments

Georgia Solo

Red Solo Cup

I recently wrote a column on Tiny House Entertainment for Tiny House Listings.  In this article I suggested that one consider carefully what space they will allow for entertainment.  What I had not considered is that there are people all over the world who can find and make their own entertainment.  Some people can even provide entertainment to others with virtually nothing but their own talent.

I knew I missed the boat when I saw this video come up on my Facebook thread!

This is my cousin Georgia, her red solo cup and her angelic vocal cords.  Clearly she has offered a great instrument for the Tiny House community… A whole band can be set up for $1.69 and then they stack away neatly or can be filled and used when you are doing playing.

Maybe I will have better luck with this than with the strumstick?  Or perhaps Hj can play the strumstick, Georgia the solo cup and it is back to the spoons for me.  Georgia can do the singing; maybe her mom too?  Marnie also has great vocal cords and she also plays the uke!  How does that sound for a Tiny House band?

Categories: Art, Open your eyes, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario, View | Tags: | 3 Comments

Feeding the Birds

Last year I purchased two bird feeders that were on sale for $5.  The first time it rained, I realized why they were so cheap.  The bases filled with water and the food on the bottom absorbed the water and turned into sticky goo which I had to dig out.  Gross!  Sadly too, pretty useless unless you have a covered patio, which I don’t… you know… rain happens.

This year because of the earlier drought I know that the birds suffer and will continue to suffer unless there is food put out for them because not enough stuff germinated and created seeds.  I had been thinking about buying a different feeder because I hate to throw the seeds out on the ground when we live so close to a feral colony here in Hamilton.  A while back, my friend O and I were at a greenhouse where I was admiring the practicality of $90 bird feeders and telling her about my terrible feeders.  She suggested that I buy a plastic bowl from the dollar store to cover them and drill a hole in the top (they have to be flexible plastic).  Yesterday, I finally got around to buying and preparing them and I already have a hundred sparrows chattering happily outside.  I am not sure if the bowls are large enough but  rain is coming so, I guess I will know soon enough if their food will stay dry.

DIY Covered bird feeders

Categories: Nature, Open your eyes, Simple living | Tags: , , | 7 Comments

The Sensual Stars

Don’t you just love to read in bed on a cold day?  Particularly, if it is damp and rainy?  I do.

The cold outside made the windows all fog over, after I added a little heating.  This meant, I did not have much of a view upstairs, but even so, it was certainly bright enough to read.

Frosty window

It is always warmer in the loft than it is on the main level, heat rises.  Still it is nice to get right in bed and roll up cozy in layers of blankets on a lazy afternoon.

David's gift

The book is The Starry Room, a gift from my friend D, who is also a writer as well as an off-grid and Tiny House enthusiast. He thought I would enjoy the book in the quiet of THO’s forest and he was right.   The Author Fred Schaaf words are intuitive and sensual, as well as very much in tune with the sky and the ebb and flow of nature.  He writes,”we should not forget ourselves in our role as appreciators in these heavens we study.  There is no feeling of insignificance or meaninglessness for anyone who is an active participant in this appreciation, which not only involves us in the cosmos but makes us intimate with it as only friends or lovers can be.  And only through the medium of not just our senses, thought, and feeling but also through a sky we can have this involvement.”

He is not quite so lyrical as my hero Erazim Kohák, but even so he speaks to the issue of bonds and connections that we humans can can attain if we take a little time to understand.  I like this about the book, very much.  Connection to life, matters a lot to me.

“There is creative reading as well as creative writing.” ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

Categories: Art, Forest, Nature, Open your eyes, Simple living | Tags: , , , | 2 Comments