Blue Mountain Baskets

Basketmaking & Growing Willow in the Blue Mountains, Ontario, Canada

Category: Creating with Stone

Week 36: Fresh heritage willow garden sphere- 1st prize at the Fair!

At our local Beaver Valley Fall Fair, I entered three categories:

A garden ornament made of sticks and stones.  I used fresh cut local heritage willow to weave the sphere and then added a variety of stones that come out of my digging up here inside the sphere.  I sprayed clear coat on the rocks to bring out their beautiful colours like they look when they are wet.

 

 


Something useful from something useless.  I entered a couple of my baskets made from Ethernet wire cut-off ends.


A craft made from wood not otherwise in another category.  So I entered a Dogwood basket!

Week 24: Fresh Dogwood & Willow Rock Basket

Small stones and giant boulders that have all been dug out of our land here on top of the escarpment.

Okay, so sometimes I forget to soak my dry willow early enough in the week and have to be creative otherwise. This week I clipped my heirloom willow (the original willow here on our land- still don’t know what variety it is) and natural dogwood to make a basket out of this ‘green’ stuff.

It’s a struggle compared to lovely cultivated dried willow, but I also made it more challenging than need be! I was curious about starting a round base and then filling two sides with half moons of weaving to craft an oval. I was also trying for a rounded transition from base to sides so did no waling. Hence, the shape was difficult to work with.

Furthermore, I tried using long stakes from one side of the slate to the other so I had to tackle the border with thick butt ends and thin tips. AND I didn’t leave long enough ends of stakes to weave traditional borders. So In conclusion I have a truly rustic basket in shape, weave & material.

Since this basket is an ode to the heirloom willow and dogwood of the land, I have dedicated it to a rock collection. In it you will see the variety of rocks that come out of our soil. The glaciers rolled over this limestone escarpment dropping souvenir rocks from as far as the Canadian Shield on the other side of Georgian Bay! I sprayed the rocks with acrylic gloss clear coat to bring out the brilliant colours of the rocks just like when they are wet.

Maple rubs up against the basket. You can see the size of the boulder in comparison.

Splitting My First Stone

After taking the Drystone Canada workshop, I tried my hand at splitting a rock back home.

Dry Stack Stone Wall Workshop with Drystone Canada

Walling Workshop, Scottsdale Farm, Georgetown, Ontario

In October 2017. I participated in a Dry Stone Canada walling workshop and learned techniques while rebuilding an old stone wall on the historic Scottsdale Farm.

 

 

DIY 2-story Drystacked Fireplace

This was a satisfying DIY project at home.  We could not afford a real stone fireplace but these concrete dry stack blocks look great.  I did use stones from the property to mortar a hearth- complete with a fossil, granite , limestone and shale.  The glaciers picked up so much rock as it cruised through this old lake bed, that it dropped so many varieties into our earth! 

http://fusionstone.ca/en/dry-stack/

Hearth of Stone from our Land

Stone hearth