A few days ago, I took some time out to try to get to the bottom of my
woodpile. I don’t often see the pallets
at the bottom as, more often or not, more wood is dumped on before I get to the
bottom of the existing pile. All my wood
is collected by hand, and cut by hand – never using a chainsaw. Lots of people think I am crazy, but I don’t
think so.
If I am collecting driftwood off the shore, I am simultaneously
exercising the dogs, exercising myself, enjoying the fresh air, watching the
gulls, the heron, listening to the wind, or to the quiet. I find myself reflecting on where the wood
might have come from, how long it has been in the water, or, indeed, how long
buried in the sand before being washed up.
I can look in among the seaweed for anything of interest. I look at the shape of the wood, imagining
where it once stood when it was part of a tree.
If I am collecting in woods, or fields, I can watch the
sheep or cattle and listen to their conversations, or listen to the birds, keep
an eye out for buzzards, ravens, pine marten, squirrels, deer. Sometimes I don’t see anything because the
dogs are playing boisterously around the grass or trees. But once again, it is an opportunity to be
outside with my dogs.
The collection is often left in piles to dry out a bit and
then eventually piled up in the vehicle to go home, and once again all handled
onto the wood pile just inside my gate.
My hands invariably smell of earth, or sea, or both, and my clothes
covered in moss or seaweed – or both.
When it comes to cutting it into lengths, because I don’t
use a chainsaw, it means the dogs can be outside with me. They know to keep out of the range of the
bowsaw, and if they do get too close, it is easy enough to halt in my
movement. As I handle the wood onto my
sawhorse, I often remember finding that bit, sometimes I remember an incident
attached to it. I rarely cut rhododendron
without remembering the cut to the bone of my finger in a momentary lapse of
concentration. I think I was rushing
that day….I should know better.
|
The Cutting Room Floor |
|
And The View From The Cutting Room Floor |
I like to cut wood in the morning sunshine – we have had
precious little of that this year, hence this late push to get some more
done. As I cut, I often put pieces
aside, with thoughts of something else I might do with it.
|
Might find another use for this. |
Each season brings its own entertainment; the courting
birdsong of early spring, the rush and push to get as much food as possible for
baby birds, the neighbour’s chickens, the wind in the trees, the joy of a line
of washing blowing in a warm summer wind, the oystercatchers down on the shore,
visiting children next door.
I watch Tussock sleeping at the foot of the house steps,
gradually turning from black to speckly black as sawdust drifts over and
settles on her. Talulah curls up to the
side of me for a time, watching what I am doing. River and Skara watch out for intruders. Or they all sunbathe on the path.
|
I think they were watching a passing crow here. |
Or sometimes we have a bit of play time.
|
I think this might have been a hot day. |
And once it is cut, then it is sorted into which pile it
will go on – good and dry goes in the early winter pile, seasoned but a bit
damp goes in the mid-winter pile, not quite ready, but will be in a month or
two goes in the late-winter pile. Then
there is the next-winter pile.
|
Time to put the feet up. |
No comments:
Post a Comment