Those are the adventures of Mr. Fimbulmyrk, in bushcraft and blacksmithing, mountainbiking and hiking, reenactment, writing, singing, dancing, stargazing and having a piece of cake and a coffee. Pray have a seat and look around you, but be warned - the forest´s twilight is ferocious at times.
Posts mit dem Label folk music werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label folk music werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Mittwoch, 18. Februar 2015
Donnerstag, 27. November 2014
Archery meeting@Bethaus der Bergleute
Nick deserves a load of respect, too, for he had gone to the extra length of making a funny 3 D target out of old bed linen. Willibald, as it was tauted soon, received a right whacking that day. Thanks, bro!
Jens is one of the better individuals at Zee Aylienz bedlam and capable of social contacts even;-). He had a youth bow with him, but no less fun for the fact.
There was a lot of socializing going on, too. It was more like a giant party from lunch till well after midnight!
Frank from Zee Aylienz, an accomplished archer and one of the more clever trolls of the team;-), mounting his bow.
He also did a fair amount of tutoring for the beginners, and contributed a lot to the great atmosphere.
I loved his quiver with the beautiful etching.
His forearm brace-sweet!
This one´s made by Olaf, who is an absolute expert in leather tooling, doing this for some 30 years!
There also was a great abundance of delicious food and strong Java-perfect!
Then Dirk, Kirsten and their kids arrived and added a whole new spice to the event. They are all accomplished competition archers (Olympic recurve), but they also love the traditional side of archery, so much in fact that Kirsten actually will shoot the competition season with a traditional blank recurve bow. Now to Kirsten I must sincerely apologize. We "know" each other since we went to school, but I always thought her to be a bit stiff. But we always treated each other with respect, and since she also is the midwife of one of my best friends, Gesa, we always stayed in contact. On Gesa´s birthday party, Dirk and I had a chat and I simply invited him along. Should have done this years earlier, and I look forward to many more sessions like this!
They brought along a load of gear. Those funnily fletched arrows to the right are bird arrows with a blunt tip. The spiral fletching makes them slower to not smash the bird to pieces, by the way.
I want to introduce you to Krümel, Irmi´s lovely licce Corgie, the one dog I know who can actually talk.;-)
Of course we took good care to have a clear range. All of those folks were acting very responsibly.
Three targets were there.
Nick nocking new arrows;-)...
Aim..... shoot....
...and do the fetching with a grin.
I was very fond of a very precious and rare knife Olaf had on his belt. It is a very close replica of a not-so-widely-known Horace Kephart knife. Presumeably of Sheffield or US origin, the blade is made of carbon steel and the handle´s beautifully aged stag antler.
Then Volker had, in spite of getting paid by us not to do so, a children´s birthday party scheduled. Not wanting any kids to be hurt, we obstained from shooting in the afternoon and did some forging. This time Volker really got the wrong end of me, and, consulting a lawyer of the team, I made a waiver of liability together with a treaty of beneficial interest for him and had him warrant a conventional fee in case of any irregularities on his part. I hate things like that. I hated even more the fact that this treaty bounced loose an avalanche of completely mad discussion in the team. It went like this:
A: I want to make very sure the team cannot made responsible or liable.
B: The treaty is made to ensure exactly this.
C: But I must persist, the team is not to be made liable.
B: The treaty is a waiver of liability.
D: But indeed the team must not be made liable.
B: The treaty is a waiver of liability.
A: But the team must not be made liable.
Goto 10, ca. 10 hours of discussion long. GAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!!!!
But at the event, all was good. The forge was lit, I traded some sincere words with Volker, and all went smoothly. We had a lot of fun, and the atmosphere, in spite of the bad start, was very freindly and laidback.
Jens did some forging, too, and had fun in the process. I really admire him for the broadness of his expertise; from cave-climbing, freeclimbing, mountainbiking, engineering, carving, painting, making music, archaeology, reenactment, ornithology, ecology, to philosophy he has a vast line of interest. Jens, if you happen to be around, don´t be shy and drop by!
It was funny...the magic of fire just did its duty, and molded a community of hearts again. Many different characters, many with nicks and dents, simply blended into a good-natured day.
Well after dawn we gathered around the long table, barbecueing and having a feast, Jandark and Erdmuthe dropped by, everyone had a good time, and lovely Irm took out the guitar and we played some music and sang along.
Jan took back my bow (on the ride to the smithy it was quite .... interesting;-), with the bow tied to my top tube and seat stays), and well after midnight I rode home, again with a warm feeling in my heart.
It was not easy organizing the event, because of morons and sociopaths;-), but what really counts is the outcome. Friends, for you I fight with joy!
Mittwoch, 27. Juni 2012
Summer Fair in the Bethaus smithy-Crappy weather, but good fun!
On Saturday and Sunday we had organized the Summer Fair at the Bethaus smithy. We were privileged to have Craig Herbertson unplugged and live on Saturday. Craig is a Folk, Rock and Blues musician, and a very, very good one, if you ask me. Enjoy!
There was an abundance of delicious cakes, coffee and quality food as usual, provided by Jochen, our ex - submarine cook. You know what happens if you´re cooking bad food on a submarine? You have to scrub the deck*ggg*... So great food galore!;-)
Craig played his fingers sore, but he had fun at that-or so he said;-).
Willi dropped by also, and sat down at Craig´s table, and we had some singing and clapping and coffee and woodspirit-lookalike-contest*ggg*and enjoyed the music.
Don´t you think we did not work that day!*ggg* I made this Sgian Dhú blade as a gift for Craig. Spring steel, selective temper, and stands the test. 3mm spine thickness, 95 mm long, and it will get a plain stag antler handle, maybe with a clan crest, but we´re still designing. Guess Craig enjoyed it...
Willi made some mini axes, too. Here he´s working with his Dremel mini power tool.
Then Olaf dropped by to have me make a knife for and together with his little one. Olaf is head chairman of an archery club in Wuppertal and a real knife afficionado. I am not always agreed with his stance on knife collecting, but it simply feels good to have other people around that do not think knives are the essence of Evil!
Mind you, for some brief moments, even the sun came out!
This is Willy doing the finishing grind on... what...?!
This one-the knife I made for Olaf´s son. Spring steel, selective temper, spine thickness 3 mm, length roundabout 11 cm. I actually liked it a lot and would have kept it myself.... but as is, they got it at a bargain, nothing at al, to be precise *grml*.
I also started a drinking horn stand for my sweetheart... This is the head.
This is the tail...
...and the thing overall... has to get a bit longer still.
Two mini axes / hatchets by Willi, a snake he made for his wife,
And the "dwarf knife" he started at the industrial museum.
I also made a dragon head knife. This is a detail of the work in progress, no blade yet.
The handle is partly bush knife style.
Willi at the forge.
I then started an integral En - Nep from a railroad screw. Here the tang is being formed.
...and a hardy chisel out of the same material.
The blade taking shape. The knife will see less than 1 % stock removal.
The dragon head knife with blade formed.
Topmost is a barbecue fork Willi made. I really like this a lot, cleanly made!
Willi apparently does, too;-).
And my hardy chisel ready to rumble!;-) I like the stained and spotted surface, it was rusted deep, and the structure I find interesting.
So, to sum it all up, it was a very busy weekend, with a very wet Sunday. We made the best out of the lack of visitors, and had fun playing around and having good food. It was all less than ideal, but what could we do? Nothing but having fun as it was and planning for the next event. And fun we DID have, met a lot of nice people we hope to meet again.
And, if you look closely, the fair wasn´t even going so bad, for some visitors that actually mattered found the way into the smithy and will come again. We are now planning for the autumn fair which has yet to be scheduled. Watch this place!
Craig played his fingers sore, but he had fun at that-or so he said;-).
Willi dropped by also, and sat down at Craig´s table, and we had some singing and clapping and coffee and woodspirit-lookalike-contest*ggg*and enjoyed the music.
Don´t you think we did not work that day!*ggg* I made this Sgian Dhú blade as a gift for Craig. Spring steel, selective temper, and stands the test. 3mm spine thickness, 95 mm long, and it will get a plain stag antler handle, maybe with a clan crest, but we´re still designing. Guess Craig enjoyed it...
Willi made some mini axes, too. Here he´s working with his Dremel mini power tool.
Then Olaf dropped by to have me make a knife for and together with his little one. Olaf is head chairman of an archery club in Wuppertal and a real knife afficionado. I am not always agreed with his stance on knife collecting, but it simply feels good to have other people around that do not think knives are the essence of Evil!
Mind you, for some brief moments, even the sun came out!
This is Willy doing the finishing grind on... what...?!
This one-the knife I made for Olaf´s son. Spring steel, selective temper, spine thickness 3 mm, length roundabout 11 cm. I actually liked it a lot and would have kept it myself.... but as is, they got it at a bargain, nothing at al, to be precise *grml*.
I also started a drinking horn stand for my sweetheart... This is the head.
This is the tail...
...and the thing overall... has to get a bit longer still.
Two mini axes / hatchets by Willi, a snake he made for his wife,
And the "dwarf knife" he started at the industrial museum.
I also made a dragon head knife. This is a detail of the work in progress, no blade yet.
The handle is partly bush knife style.
Willi at the forge.
I then started an integral En - Nep from a railroad screw. Here the tang is being formed.
...and a hardy chisel out of the same material.
The blade taking shape. The knife will see less than 1 % stock removal.
The dragon head knife with blade formed.
Topmost is a barbecue fork Willi made. I really like this a lot, cleanly made!
Willi apparently does, too;-).
And my hardy chisel ready to rumble!;-) I like the stained and spotted surface, it was rusted deep, and the structure I find interesting.
So, to sum it all up, it was a very busy weekend, with a very wet Sunday. We made the best out of the lack of visitors, and had fun playing around and having good food. It was all less than ideal, but what could we do? Nothing but having fun as it was and planning for the next event. And fun we DID have, met a lot of nice people we hope to meet again.
And, if you look closely, the fair wasn´t even going so bad, for some visitors that actually mattered found the way into the smithy and will come again. We are now planning for the autumn fair which has yet to be scheduled. Watch this place!
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