Blue Mountain Baskets

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

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Week 21: Back to the ‘First Basket’

Double border.

I had left some willow soaking over a couple of weeks, but happily I discovered it was still in good shape. I decided to test my skill progress by returning to Jon Ridgeon’s First Basket from the first chapter of his book. I made it faster than the two I made earlier from this design and was pleased with the weave and that I managed to keep the circle shape. When I finished the 4-behind-1 border, I didn’t want to cut off the still nice long soft ends. I liked learning from my Latvian log basket that you can weave a second border around the side of the first, so I turned this basket upside down and did the same pattern as the first border. An extra flare on the top of an otherwise simple basket.

Spring Planting: Lavender, Herbs & Vegetables

Spring 2018

Spring sunset over the lavender field.

I now have 36 lavenders planted, because some of my first varieties have not survived this cold zone’s winters.  This year, I selected 18 Phenomenals because of their tolerance to cold (here in a cold altitude of Zone 4) and their ultra long stems.  They are already blooming and have a lovely scent.  Sellers of this variety are few and far between because of its patent, so I went to Richters. I hope to weave small baskets from these lovely stems that are already 18 to 24 inches long!

The first two rows which includes 50 feet of lavender.

I have tilled 3 approximately 65-foot rows so that I can snake 200 feet of soaker hoses along them nestled in the wood chips.  I have had to add a third row because my Mom and I rescued a number of cheap mystery tomatoes and peppers from the greenhouse. I have 24 tomato plants alone! We have natural berry bushes around the property, so I am also tucking them in at the end of the rows.

Week 19: Latvian Log Basket with Basketmaster Steen Madsen

Left to right: Lene Rasmussen of Lakeshore Willows; me with Latvian log basket; and Steen Madsen, Danish Basketmaster.

I put my tools in the base to show the scale of this stake spider!

End of Day 1

Close up on Day 2: first border.

Week 18: Step-by-Step Ethernet & Electrical Wire Basket

Here is an adapted approach to using wire that does not spring or create tension like willow does.  Photos to follow…

Wire Materials
  1. Gather your wire. I untwisted Ethernet  (CAT 6) wire cut-offs for the green/white twisted wires, used CAT 5 for thinner weavers to start the base, and used 18-gauge white-coated wire from an old power cord.
  2. Colour your wire if needed.  To match my son’s business logo I used a permanent Sharpie pen to colour the white wire.
Stakes
  1. Cut base stakes long so that they can become the side stakes later (to minimize sharp cut ends in the basket.
  2. Twist 2 wires together for the base stakes to provide firmness. This also means you will have double the side stakes ready to go when you weave the sides.
Chase-weave Base
  1. Untwist double wires slightly & feed the perpendicular bottom stakes through.
  2. Use your thinnest wire to begin base chase weave. I untwisted the white/green Ethernet wire to start by using the 2 strands separately.
  3. Chase weave as usual.
  4. Bend stakes up & untwist the double wires.
  5. Add a 3-rod wale.

    After the base was woven, I removed the square start to reveal and interesting pattern.

    Traditional start to round basket. Notice stake twisted wires were untwisted in the middle to slide the perpendicular stakes through.

French-randing Sides
  1. Decide how high up your sides will go. At that point on each side stake, twist a new wire around it downward, so that a long weaver now points down.
  2. Weave by French randing as usual.  The wire rows spring up but are easy to keep pushing down  to tighten the final weave once at the top of the sides.
Border
  1. At the top of the sides, add a 3-rod wale or don’t. Both works due to the sturdiness of the wire.
  2. If you choose a track border, finish the end on the inside of the basket so they don’t poke out on outside edge.
  3. If you choose a braided border, the end will finish hiding under the braided lip.
  4. In either case, use needle-nose pliers to tug the ends before cutting.

    Border example

    Braided border

Week 17: 2nd Green & Purple Wire Basket

On the screen is my son’s business website.

Part 2 of making baskets in my son’s business colours

This time I grabbed the power cable off the old air compressor to use its white coated wire to make a purple one (with a Sharpie pen).  Unfortunately it was a thicker wire (as a compressor is a heavy duty sort of kit!), so I found the unmatched diameters of the wires caused some frustration. I wove and UNwove the sides several times before getting a tight enough weave.  I then tried one more time with a thinner power wire and documented the tips and steps I have learned along the way. I use the same process as willow baskets but have to alter some techniques to suit the wire.  Wire is lovely at bending and staying that way but it cannot spring back the way willow can.  Sometimes you want that natural tension to keep ends in place.  Also, wire ends can be sharp when clipped so I have adapted some techniques to minimize the number of ends in contrast to using willow.

3 kinds of wires

  1. In the centre of the base is CAT 5 green & white Ethernet wire that has been untwisted into two separate strands. This was the thinnest, so I could get a tight weave at the start.
  2. Twisted green & white CAT 6 Ethernet wire is used next to finishe the base and weave up the sides.  I also used it for the stakes.
  3. For the purple accent, white 18-gauge wire salvaged from an old power cord was coloured purple with a Sharpie. Even though it is a permanent marker, it could use a little touching up because you rub against it quite a bit when weaving.

Upside-down close up of three kinds of wires.

 

Mindful Morning among the Birds

View from my porch that morning (and Maple sharing it with me on the grass).

I am a member of the Blue Mountains’ Writers’ Group, and our task of this week was to create a story using only one words for each letter of the alphabet.  I was impressed by those who could do it in alphabetical order! The morning of our meeting day, I sat on my porch and took in the sights and sounds in a senses meditation. There was an orchestra of birds as the sun rose! After taking in the feel, sounds, sights and smells of the morning, I wrote down all of the sounds and sights.  I also learned  few new names of colours in the task.

You could hear the landscape’s layers. Birds at every hill and tree cluster as far as the eye can see and even farther as the ear can hear.

  • Trill of the squirrels
  • Rattle of woodpeckers
  • Thunder thuds of grouse
  • Honks of geese in distance
  • Chirps and whistle and tweets
  • Chatter of squirrels
  • Caws
  • Coos of dove
  • Echos of cranes
  • Flaps of a crow overhead
  • A fat wild turkey appears a murmur of low gobbles in the bush.
  • A flock of geese signaling
Finished Task for BM Writers’ Group
Yonder dawn’s xanthic amber sunlight peeks from under grey veil; hence, there is no celestial zaffre. Birds kibitz whistling, rattling, quipping. Morning jabber echoes over landscape.

Amber
Birds
Celestial
Dawn’s
Echo
From
Grey
Hence
Is
Jabbers
Kibitz
Landscape
Morning
No
Over
Peeks
Quips
Rattles
Sunlight
There
Under
Veil
Whistles
Xanthic
Yonder
Zaffre

 

Heirloom Willow in Egypt, Blue Mountains

Spring 2018

May 24: Heirloom willow at the end of our concession. It sits in water all year long.

I took a walk down to the end of my concession to see the start of the heirloom willow growing season.  There are two distinct varieties, both of which have found their way up to our property too.  I’d like to find out what kind these two are!  There has been pioneer settlement here since the 1870s, so I am not sure if this is true natural or transplanted for settler’s sally patches.

Heirloom Mystery #1

Heirloom Mystery #2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This is the spring brook we have flowing down from the marsh at the roadside into our pond. After the winter flattened the tall grasses, I discovered another dozen heirloom willows I missed transplanting in the fall!

 

Still waiting for Spring…

Spring 2018: April 29

April 29. 2018: Some areas are clear of snow but my new willow patch locations still have a foot of snow and rock hard ground.

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