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Checking the camping gear

It’s been some time since I’ve been camping. There was a time when I did it two or three times during a typical summer. I’ve decided to take a little roadtrip in early September to the Rockbridge Mountain Music and Dance Festival down in Virginia. This is one of several gatherings of old time music freaks enthusiasts that happen each year in Virginia, West Virginia and North Carolina. The grandest of these festivals is Clifftop, which happens in West Virginia annually. I’ve been planning to visit Clifftop for some time now but it seems each summer unforeseen circumstances have blocked the way. I suppose a trip to Rockbridge is my consolation prize.

The plan is to camp for a few days at the festival location, Glen Maury Park. I was happy to find out the campground has showers and happier still when I read there will be a couple food trucks on site. There will be banjo, guitar and fiddle workshops and square dancing to live bands, and there will also be plenty of jamming in the campground. It should be loads of fun.

Most of my camping gear is still in good shape. One change I’m making is to retire the old Coleman camp stove and replace it with a new propane camp stove. The Coleman stove was my dad’s before it became mine and it served us well over the years. I guess we’ve had it for 4 or 5 decades. At one point I had to replace the fuel tank after is started leaking under pressure with the stove on. I’ve long been nervous of messing with camp fuel (do they still call it naptha?) though, and when I saw propane stoves on sale at a hard to resist price, I decided it was time to make the change.

My tent is still in good shape. Several years ago, after a long time using a very light-weight tent, handy for canoe trips and that kind of thing, I bought a roomier model and decided I was happy restricting myself to camping at a campsite beside my car. At that time I also started using a clumsy but comfortable air mattress instead of the skinny little very uncomfortable sleeping pads I relied on for years.

It’s a strange political climate right now to go visiting the American south and for the first time I considered avoiding America for a while. The festival is only a couple hours away from Charlottesville where the recent racist violence took place. In the end though, I decided to go. I think an environment full of musicians will be cool and relaxed.

The only preparation I really have to do is go through my box of miscellaneous camping junk to make sure I have everything I need. I always do this and 9 times out of 10 it is complete. Still, it’s good to be prepared.

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Smalti

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The guy who imports all the smalti mosaic tiles is located not far from us, near Queensway and Royal York here in the west end of Toronto. I stopped in today and bought about 15 lbs of Italian smalti tiles. These are very expensive but they are the best mosaic tiles I’ve ever seen. Our next project will be a giant black-crowned night heron, a bird we’ve seen many times over in Sam Smith Park. This one will be done entirely with smalti and grouted.

 

 

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Back to the creek

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A week or so ago, George had a sore leg. It hurt him when he went from a lying down position up to a sitting position and when it hurt, he yelped. His vet didn’t see anything serious going on – by the time I brought him in, he was clearly already on the mend. The plan was to give him an anti-inflammatory for a few days and restrict him from fun stuff like swimming.

He’s been doing well, and it’s been around a week so this morning I asked The Partners if they wanted to go for a ride to the creek in the car. I didn’t have to ask twice. They had a great time, and as a bonus brought home lots of sand from the creek.

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Banjo Practice: La Grande Chaine

I know this tune as a French Canadian reel, but I think it’s also played in Scotland as The Grand Chain. I don’t now who had it first. I learned it at Midwest Banjo Camp from Cathy Barton Para. It’s curious that a guy from Ontario would go to Michigan to learn a French Canadian tune from a Missouri banjo player, but c’est la vie, eh.

I heard a French Canadian fiddle version of this that is way way faster than I can play it. It makes me want to work on my speed though. I think in Quebec it would more likely be fiddle and piano or possibly fiddle and accordion rather than banjo, but it’s a fun one to play on banjo. Cathy Barton and Dave Para also do a great version of this tune on their recent Carp Fishing in Missouri recording, with Cathy playing hammered dulcimer.

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The Owl and the Butterfly

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The owl used to hang where the giant butterfly now hangs at 27th Street. Today I hung the owl on the other side of the garage. That owl seemed huge when we made it, but the monarch makes it seem as if the owl should be even bigger.

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Shell-bodied butterfly

We finished this new butterfly mosaic the other day….

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It has a wingspan of about 19 inches. We made it with shells, broken crockery, ceramic tiles, smalti tiles, pennies, plastic flowers. You can see lots more mosaics at our Long Branch Mosaics page. We do all kinds of custom mosaic work.