Glass Show In Venice
By ELISABETTA POVOLEDO
Published: Sunday, September 8, 1996
From:http://www.nytimes.com/1996/09/08/travel/glass-show-in-venice.html?sec=travel
(This event has already happened)
Venice will play host to ''Open Glass,'' the city's first international exhibition of contemporary glass art, from Sept. 12 to Nov. 10. The exhibition will feature the work of more than 100 contemporary glass artists from around the world, including Dale Chihuly from the United States, Stanislav Libensky from the Czech Republic, Bert Frijns from the Netherlands and Antoine Leperlier from France.
Venice has been known for centuries for its tradition of glass blowing, and it is to celebrate this art, passed on from generation to generation of master glass artists, that the municipal government conceived of the event to highlight the work of contemporary artists. The exhibition will become a biannual event alternating with the Biennale of Contemporary Art. An international jury will choose the best four pieces.
Most of the works, ranging from vases and small sculptures to large installations, will be displayed at the Ducal Palace, the Correr Museum and the Vetrario Museum on the island of Murano. Viewers will also be able to admire a number of installations by taking a boat up the Grand Canal.
Among the exhibits will be ''Chihuly Over Venice,'' Dale Chihuly's installation of a series of 15-foot high ''chandeliers'' that will be hung within palaces, courtyards and gardens visible from the Grand Canal. The Seattle-based Chihuly has spent over $1 million on the Venice project, involving over 300 people, including teams of glass blowers from three countries.
The Ducal Palace, Correr Museum and Vetrario Museum are open daily from 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. Tickets cost $9.30 and can be bought until one hour before closing. One ticket will allow admission to all three venues. Most of Mr. Chihuly's works will be visible only from outside the palaces where they will be installed, but some, like the one in the garden of the Guggenheim museum, can be viewed up close from inside. Information: (041) 2707717. ELISABETTA POVOLEDO
Photo: Dale Chihuly and one of the chandeliers of ''Chihuly Over Venice.'' (Russell Johnson)
Showing posts with label Ceramics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ceramics. Show all posts
Thursday, March 26, 2009
City of Angles
IN CHICAGO, WHERE A NEWFOUND VITALITY IS FUELING A BOOMLET IN STYLE AND DESIGN, THE FUTURE IS NOW. BY GIOIA DILIBERTO
Photographs by Raymond Meier
From: http://www.nytimes.com/indexes/2009/03/22/style/t/index.html#pagewanted=0&pageName=22chiw&
Since 1871, when it rose spectacularly after the Great Fire, Chicago has been famous for pioneering architecture — from the steel-frame skyscraper to the flat geometry of the Prairie School to Mies van der Rohe’s clean Minimalism. When it comes to cutting-edge fashion, though, the city rarely registered. Lost between the glamorous coasts, it’s been a no-style zone. Until now.
Chicago has always been a shopping town, with all the blue-chip flagships — Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Burberry — on the luxury thoroughfare known as the Magnificent Mile, along with world-class department stores like Marshall Field’s (now Macy’s), where, in the pre-jet age, women could buy line-for-line copies of French couture. But it took Michelle Obama, a woman who knows how to mix some serious-looking Azzedine Alaïa accessories with her J. Crew staples, to bolster the city’s fashion confidence. If New York is a sleek sophisticate in black and Los Angeles a tanned blonde in a tank top and jewels, then Chicago is the stylish but sensible girl next door. Before the election, Obama was spotted shopping at Lori’s Shoes, a popular discount store on the city’s North Side. ‘‘Michelle doesn’t want to be seen as a diva,’’ says Maria Pinto, the designer who dressed the first lady in her classically feminine sheaths for several key campaign appearances and recently opened a minimalist boutique in the SoHo-like West Loop neighborhood.
It’s there, and in arty Wicker Park and the hip Southport Corridor, that you’ll find a trendy brew of established and new designers showcased in independent boutiques. There are innovators like Kelly Whitesell and Elizabeth Del Castillo of Eskell, which makes youthful clothes using hand-printed fabrics, and Yoko Uozumi and her husband, the techno D.J. Jeff Mills, who own the ‘‘concept’’ shop Gamma Player. ‘‘This spring we’re inspired by Niterói, the seaside town in Brazil,’’ says Uozumi, who builds her collections around town in Brazil,’’ says Uozumi, who builds her collections around different themes, ‘‘so we’re carrying dresses in geometric prints that invoke the sea.’’
Old World elegance reigns supreme at Blake, where Balenciaga hangs with Dries Van Noten in a converted post office. Then there is Ikram Goldman, Obama’s style consigliere, who has famously introduced heartland shoppers to fantasy-inspired pieces by Proenza Schouler, Viktor & Rolf and Rodarte at her avant-garde emporium. Only the city’s harsh weather is a hindrance to fashion savvy. ‘‘We’ll be promoting big handbags forever,’’ says Tricia Tunstall, co-founder of the boutique p.45. ‘‘You’ve got to have a way to carry your high heels, so you can check your snow boots at the door.’’
IN CHICAGO, WHERE A NEWFOUND VITALITY IS FUELING A BOOMLET IN STYLE AND DESIGN, THE FUTURE IS NOW. BY GIOIA DILIBERTO
Photographs by Raymond Meier
From: http://www.nytimes.com/indexes/2009/03/22/style/t/index.html#pagewanted=0&pageName=22chiw&
Since 1871, when it rose spectacularly after the Great Fire, Chicago has been famous for pioneering architecture — from the steel-frame skyscraper to the flat geometry of the Prairie School to Mies van der Rohe’s clean Minimalism. When it comes to cutting-edge fashion, though, the city rarely registered. Lost between the glamorous coasts, it’s been a no-style zone. Until now.
Chicago has always been a shopping town, with all the blue-chip flagships — Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Burberry — on the luxury thoroughfare known as the Magnificent Mile, along with world-class department stores like Marshall Field’s (now Macy’s), where, in the pre-jet age, women could buy line-for-line copies of French couture. But it took Michelle Obama, a woman who knows how to mix some serious-looking Azzedine Alaïa accessories with her J. Crew staples, to bolster the city’s fashion confidence. If New York is a sleek sophisticate in black and Los Angeles a tanned blonde in a tank top and jewels, then Chicago is the stylish but sensible girl next door. Before the election, Obama was spotted shopping at Lori’s Shoes, a popular discount store on the city’s North Side. ‘‘Michelle doesn’t want to be seen as a diva,’’ says Maria Pinto, the designer who dressed the first lady in her classically feminine sheaths for several key campaign appearances and recently opened a minimalist boutique in the SoHo-like West Loop neighborhood.
It’s there, and in arty Wicker Park and the hip Southport Corridor, that you’ll find a trendy brew of established and new designers showcased in independent boutiques. There are innovators like Kelly Whitesell and Elizabeth Del Castillo of Eskell, which makes youthful clothes using hand-printed fabrics, and Yoko Uozumi and her husband, the techno D.J. Jeff Mills, who own the ‘‘concept’’ shop Gamma Player. ‘‘This spring we’re inspired by Niterói, the seaside town in Brazil,’’ says Uozumi, who builds her collections around town in Brazil,’’ says Uozumi, who builds her collections around different themes, ‘‘so we’re carrying dresses in geometric prints that invoke the sea.’’
Old World elegance reigns supreme at Blake, where Balenciaga hangs with Dries Van Noten in a converted post office. Then there is Ikram Goldman, Obama’s style consigliere, who has famously introduced heartland shoppers to fantasy-inspired pieces by Proenza Schouler, Viktor & Rolf and Rodarte at her avant-garde emporium. Only the city’s harsh weather is a hindrance to fashion savvy. ‘‘We’ll be promoting big handbags forever,’’ says Tricia Tunstall, co-founder of the boutique p.45. ‘‘You’ve got to have a way to carry your high heels, so you can check your snow boots at the door.’’
Source: Oneida Ltd.
Oneida Unveils New Design Driven Tableware Ranges That are Emotionally Resonant and Enduring
NEW YORK, March 19, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Oneida, a global leader in designing the dining experience, continues the brand's devotion to design and quality. Flatware and Dinnerware introductions this spring blend form with contour and color with fashion, defining timeless styles that resonate with today's consumer.
This spring at the International Home and Housewares Show, March 22-24, Oneida will be showcasing its new, and current housewares flatware offerings. "We link the consumers' sense of style to three intuitive design categories, modern, classic, and decorative," said Paul Gebhardt, global head of Oneida's design team. "Drawing inspiration from architecture, the culinary arts, nature, and popular culture, our designers capture the imagination of the consumer by connecting with her lifestyle," said Gebhardt.
Oneida also leverages design to build its housewares dinnerware business. "We frame our dinnerware business into three essential categories: solid color, fashion design, and whiteware," said Tim Shine, President of Oneida's consumer division. "We continue to build the Culinaria line of solid color dinnerware with new table items and bake and serve. Our fashion dinnerware introductions this spring are on trend and exciting, and whiteware draws inspiration from casual lifestyles as well as the influence of the professional chef," said Shine.
At this year's show, Oneida is highlighting flatware and dinnerware introductions that embody the brand's devotion to its consumer:
Housewares Flatware
* Ensemble: Soft and curvaceous, Ensemble blends clean, modern,
flowing surfaces with timeless shape. Complementing today's casual
lifestyle, this design brings elegance to a youthful tabletop.
* Physique: A transitional pattern that blends classic and modern,
Physique's shape is clean and toned, and connects with both classic
and modern lifestyles.
* Slide: Smooth and fluid, Slide is pure form. It adds drama to its
rounded two-tone handle with a dramatic plunging transition.
* Optimus: Optimus is a true classic shape. From its jewel like
detail at the bowl, the handle flares outward dramatically to form
a clean trumpet shape.
Dinnerware
The essence of color, texture, form, and decoration are translated within the Oneida dinnerware introductions.
* Waldon: Nature holds the key to Waldon's aesthetic with intellectual
cognitive and even spiritual vision. Modern and stylized this
design evolves nature's artistic diversity.
* Adriatic: Soft liquid blue, Adriatic features a textural glaze that
gradually dissolves into softer tones of blue. Unique shapes
define this organic line.
* Windance: Eclectic and illustrative, Windance values nature,
sustainability, and subtle effect.
About Oneida
Incorporated in 1880, Oneida Ltd. is one of the world's largest design, sourcing and distribution companies for stainless steel and silver-plated flatware for both the consumer and foodservice industries. In North America, it is the largest supplier of dinnerware to the foodservice industry. Oneida sells under a number of well recognized brands and trademarks; (R)ONEIDA, (R)SANT'ANDREA, (R)WATERFORD, (R)WEDGWOOD, (R)SCHONWALD, (R)NORITAKE, (R)JUILLIARD, (R)MICHELANGELO, (R)EASTON, (R)WM. A. ROGERS, (R)COMMUNITY, (R)DELCO, and (R)REGO. Additional information about Oneida can be found at www.oneida.com.
CONTACT: Oneida Ltd.
Andrew G. Church, Chief Operating & Financial Officer
315-361-3718
Oneida Unveils New Design Driven Tableware Ranges That are Emotionally Resonant and Enduring
NEW YORK, March 19, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Oneida, a global leader in designing the dining experience, continues the brand's devotion to design and quality. Flatware and Dinnerware introductions this spring blend form with contour and color with fashion, defining timeless styles that resonate with today's consumer.
This spring at the International Home and Housewares Show, March 22-24, Oneida will be showcasing its new, and current housewares flatware offerings. "We link the consumers' sense of style to three intuitive design categories, modern, classic, and decorative," said Paul Gebhardt, global head of Oneida's design team. "Drawing inspiration from architecture, the culinary arts, nature, and popular culture, our designers capture the imagination of the consumer by connecting with her lifestyle," said Gebhardt.
Oneida also leverages design to build its housewares dinnerware business. "We frame our dinnerware business into three essential categories: solid color, fashion design, and whiteware," said Tim Shine, President of Oneida's consumer division. "We continue to build the Culinaria line of solid color dinnerware with new table items and bake and serve. Our fashion dinnerware introductions this spring are on trend and exciting, and whiteware draws inspiration from casual lifestyles as well as the influence of the professional chef," said Shine.
At this year's show, Oneida is highlighting flatware and dinnerware introductions that embody the brand's devotion to its consumer:
Housewares Flatware
* Ensemble: Soft and curvaceous, Ensemble blends clean, modern,
flowing surfaces with timeless shape. Complementing today's casual
lifestyle, this design brings elegance to a youthful tabletop.
* Physique: A transitional pattern that blends classic and modern,
Physique's shape is clean and toned, and connects with both classic
and modern lifestyles.
* Slide: Smooth and fluid, Slide is pure form. It adds drama to its
rounded two-tone handle with a dramatic plunging transition.
* Optimus: Optimus is a true classic shape. From its jewel like
detail at the bowl, the handle flares outward dramatically to form
a clean trumpet shape.
Dinnerware
The essence of color, texture, form, and decoration are translated within the Oneida dinnerware introductions.
* Waldon: Nature holds the key to Waldon's aesthetic with intellectual
cognitive and even spiritual vision. Modern and stylized this
design evolves nature's artistic diversity.
* Adriatic: Soft liquid blue, Adriatic features a textural glaze that
gradually dissolves into softer tones of blue. Unique shapes
define this organic line.
* Windance: Eclectic and illustrative, Windance values nature,
sustainability, and subtle effect.
About Oneida
Incorporated in 1880, Oneida Ltd. is one of the world's largest design, sourcing and distribution companies for stainless steel and silver-plated flatware for both the consumer and foodservice industries. In North America, it is the largest supplier of dinnerware to the foodservice industry. Oneida sells under a number of well recognized brands and trademarks; (R)ONEIDA, (R)SANT'ANDREA, (R)WATERFORD, (R)WEDGWOOD, (R)SCHONWALD, (R)NORITAKE, (R)JUILLIARD, (R)MICHELANGELO, (R)EASTON, (R)WM. A. ROGERS, (R)COMMUNITY, (R)DELCO, and (R)REGO. Additional information about Oneida can be found at www.oneida.com.
CONTACT: Oneida Ltd.
Andrew G. Church, Chief Operating & Financial Officer
315-361-3718
Friday, March 20, 2009
Food, wine and the fine art of sketching
By CATHERINE LANGSTON, Special to the GazetteFebruary 28, 2009
From: http://www.montrealgazette.com/Entertainment/Food+wine+fine+sketching/1338411/story.html
Squinting into the dimly lit foyer, I pressed the door buzzer beside the peel-off label reading Galerie Synesthésie. Seconds later, I was buzzed off the short, edgy stretch of Ste. Catherine St. E. near St. Laurent Blvd., and into the gallery's drawing workshop. It was like flipping the channel from a black-and-white indie documentary on street kids to a reality show in hyper-colour about an artist's loft.
But reality TV had nothing on the gallery's live model workshop when I walked in that Saturday afternoon to try my hand at sketching. A dozen-plus artists were grouped at work stations throughout the airy studio loft, preparing their materials and chatting. The model was stretching before her job under the bright lights. Soft music drifted around the long run of high-ceilinged space. Bowls of juicy grapes, ripe berries, salted nuts and chocolate biscuits surrounded a fresh baguette and cheeses. Red and white wine was on tap.
This was a drawing workshop?
"With sensory stimulus, people draw links between different sources of inspiration," explained owner Anthony Walsh, who's been running Galerie Synesthésie, which holds live model drawing sessions, art classes, and art exhibitions, since 2007.
Stimuli such as music, food or alcohol light up the brain's pleasure zones, he said, making the world, or in this case the drawing workshop, a more magical place.
Except that no one was draining the wine cartons dry. In fact, the artists seemed rooted by the challenge of rapidly sketching their impressions of the model before each 60-second pose dissolved then reformed into another. The short poses "get people into a creative state of flow" where they stop being self-critical, said Walsh, a master's student in Université de Montréal's psychology program.
So forget that Grade 2 teacher's warning not to colour outside the lines. Unlike our artistically suppressed
7-year-old selves, the sketchers at this gallery simply turn the page on their errors. And it works: halfway into the three-hour session, the Nefertiti-like necks and football shoulders of my earlier sketches had shrunk to more realistic shapes and proportions.
Art therapist Thomas Shortliffe agrees that over-rationalizing blocks the creative process, but said self-critiquing can aid growth.
"Through art, we understand about our creative process ... at the end of the process, we feel more secure in the development of our abilities," said Shortliffe, who holds a graduate degree in art therapy from Concordia University.
CÉGEP teacher and workshop regular Jane Petring said her sense of accomplishment is "related to how satisfied I am with what I produce. If I'm not working at developing (my abilities), I don't want to go there."
Walsh agreed, adding that by learning to use artists' tools for measuring angles and distances, for example, participants can start to put what they see on paper.
Sure enough, three hours and countless poses later, my first short, light, careful pencil strokes on newsprint had gradually been worked into firmer, darker, more fluid lines that captured some of the model's form and energy. And when the model stirred from her last long pose, I picked up my wine glass to toast myself for pushing past an ordinary glass door into an exceptional place.
Galerie Synesthésie is at 94 Ste. Catherine St. E., Suite 7. The three-hour sketching sessions with live models are open to everyone. Cost is $15. Sessions are on Saturdays from 4 to 7 p.m. and Sundays from 2:30 to 5:30 pm. For more information, visit www.galeriesynesthesie.com or call 514-998-7625
By CATHERINE LANGSTON, Special to the GazetteFebruary 28, 2009
From: http://www.montrealgazette.com/Entertainment/Food+wine+fine+sketching/1338411/story.html
Squinting into the dimly lit foyer, I pressed the door buzzer beside the peel-off label reading Galerie Synesthésie. Seconds later, I was buzzed off the short, edgy stretch of Ste. Catherine St. E. near St. Laurent Blvd., and into the gallery's drawing workshop. It was like flipping the channel from a black-and-white indie documentary on street kids to a reality show in hyper-colour about an artist's loft.
But reality TV had nothing on the gallery's live model workshop when I walked in that Saturday afternoon to try my hand at sketching. A dozen-plus artists were grouped at work stations throughout the airy studio loft, preparing their materials and chatting. The model was stretching before her job under the bright lights. Soft music drifted around the long run of high-ceilinged space. Bowls of juicy grapes, ripe berries, salted nuts and chocolate biscuits surrounded a fresh baguette and cheeses. Red and white wine was on tap.
This was a drawing workshop?
"With sensory stimulus, people draw links between different sources of inspiration," explained owner Anthony Walsh, who's been running Galerie Synesthésie, which holds live model drawing sessions, art classes, and art exhibitions, since 2007.
Stimuli such as music, food or alcohol light up the brain's pleasure zones, he said, making the world, or in this case the drawing workshop, a more magical place.
Except that no one was draining the wine cartons dry. In fact, the artists seemed rooted by the challenge of rapidly sketching their impressions of the model before each 60-second pose dissolved then reformed into another. The short poses "get people into a creative state of flow" where they stop being self-critical, said Walsh, a master's student in Université de Montréal's psychology program.
So forget that Grade 2 teacher's warning not to colour outside the lines. Unlike our artistically suppressed
7-year-old selves, the sketchers at this gallery simply turn the page on their errors. And it works: halfway into the three-hour session, the Nefertiti-like necks and football shoulders of my earlier sketches had shrunk to more realistic shapes and proportions.
Art therapist Thomas Shortliffe agrees that over-rationalizing blocks the creative process, but said self-critiquing can aid growth.
"Through art, we understand about our creative process ... at the end of the process, we feel more secure in the development of our abilities," said Shortliffe, who holds a graduate degree in art therapy from Concordia University.
CÉGEP teacher and workshop regular Jane Petring said her sense of accomplishment is "related to how satisfied I am with what I produce. If I'm not working at developing (my abilities), I don't want to go there."
Walsh agreed, adding that by learning to use artists' tools for measuring angles and distances, for example, participants can start to put what they see on paper.
Sure enough, three hours and countless poses later, my first short, light, careful pencil strokes on newsprint had gradually been worked into firmer, darker, more fluid lines that captured some of the model's form and energy. And when the model stirred from her last long pose, I picked up my wine glass to toast myself for pushing past an ordinary glass door into an exceptional place.
Galerie Synesthésie is at 94 Ste. Catherine St. E., Suite 7. The three-hour sketching sessions with live models are open to everyone. Cost is $15. Sessions are on Saturdays from 4 to 7 p.m. and Sundays from 2:30 to 5:30 pm. For more information, visit www.galeriesynesthesie.com or call 514-998-7625
WWOOFing it in England's Lake District
By Reb Stevenson, Ottawa Citizen; Canwest News ServiceFebruary 14, 2009
From: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/Technology/WWOOFing+England+Lake+District/1289143/story.html
Now this is green living.
Yeah, yeah, it's organic and all -- but that's not what I'm talking about.
It's the moss. The glorious emerald eco-carpet that sneaks its way onto every stone surface and infuses this landscape with a soft hint of neglect.
It's everywhere, anywhere. And it's enchanting.
As my cab navigates through Kendal and into the tiny village of Burneside, Cumbria, the taxi driver silently indulges my blathering.
It is my third week on the WWOOF (World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms) program, a global network of farms that allows you to exchange labour for accommodation and food.
You can WWOOF all over the world, but I'm doing it through WWOOF U.K. Sprint Mill Farm jumps out of the handbook because it lists "fun, variety, fulfilment and new experiences" as the work themes. Also, it is located in The Lake District, one of the U.K.'s prime tourist destinations.
A defunct mill, the farmhouse is damp, stony and clings to the bank of a gushing river. The whole place heaves with fertility.
Edward Acland runs Sprint Mill Farm with his doctor wife, Romola Stringer. Accommodation is in Acland's daughter's old bedroom in the main house. In the summer months, WWOOFers can sleep in the adjacent outbuilding.
Acland quickly ushers me into a kitchen that would make any Ikea enthusiast lash out with contempt.
It is furnished with a long wood table, a haphazard collection of glass jars stocked with mysterious contents, and a wood-burning stove most often seen in sepia photographs. This kitchen is truly the heart of the homestead.
And Acland, I soon decide, truly embodies the heart of what WWOOFing is all about.
Sprint Mill Farm is his 15-acre experiment in complete sustainability. He dabbles in coppicing (a traditional method of woodland management), animal-rearing, vegetable and fruit farming and woodcrafts.
None of it is for profit.
"It's about living off the interest and income of Mother Earth, but not using her capital," Acland explains. "We try to avoid using anything that we can't replace.
"It's jolly hard work, but very fulfilling," he says passionately.
As it turns out, WWOOFing at Sprint Mill barely even qualifies as work. After brief morning stints pitching in on the farm, I have the afternoons off.
"You can go for a walk, cycle, write, sleep ... whatever," says Acland. "It's not about exploiting a WWOOFer as a slave or labourer. It's about giving them the opportunity to experience a way of life."
And so Acland dons the mantle of mentor, not shift supervisor. He teaches me how to cut comfrey with a rusty old piece of machinery and how to forage for acorns, and eagerly shares his knowledge of green woodworking. We also have a go at weeding, apple picking and nettle-cutting.
As we trudge through the sopping landscape, Acland explains the cyclical processes that govern Sprint Mill.
For example, willow branches are fed to the goats, who gnaw off the leaves and bark. The stripped wood is used for fuel, and the goats produce milk, cheese and meat.
On the first day, bolstered by the altruistic urge to delve right into this Earth-appeasing lifestyle, I eat the goat cheese, pour goat milk into my tea and lavish my toast with goat butter. But, to borrow from Acland's earlier statement: it's jolly hard work.
By the second day, I'm wincing as I sip the tea, and gagging on the butter. To put it delicately, the flavour is evocative of an unlaundered athletic sock (to be fair, the meat isn't bad). But at least it's not a rodent: once a Moroccan WWOOFer insisted upon making good use of a squirrel that Acland caught.
"But it's a resource! It is organic!" he argued when Acland suggested a basic burial. So the WWOOFer whipped up a casserole and they had it for supper.
"I wouldn't rush at eating squirrel again," Acland laughs. "But there were messages there and I was thankful for that."
After a few days of digesting goat, I figure it's time to milk the situation. Literally.
One morning, Acland's wife leads me out to the shed for my virgin milking. A bit squeamish, I reach into the nether-area and grasp a fleshy protrusion.
"So I just yank?" I ask. "They tend to be fidgety with strangers," says Stringer. "You've just got to be firm."
I squeeze. The goat kicks a bit. But the teat squirts. Actually, it's kind of enjoyable.
Sprint Mill isn't in town, but Acland and Stringer provide wheels for their WWOOFers (bikes of course). I take full advantage of a Brompton; a London-made, folding bike.
I ride into Kendal, a favourite launching-point for hiking the nearby fells, the hills of the Lake District.
A visit to 13th-century Kendal Castle is rewarding -- for a full hour I have the ruins all to myself. Sweet!
Even sweeter: The Famous 1657 Chocolate House, where I self-medicate my goat-stricken palate with a sickening dose of chocolate. The menu consists of 20 chocolate beverages (embellished with spices, violet and the like) and 14 gateaux.
Another day, I venture out to Hill Top, Beatrix Potter's charming little home near Sawrey. The Brompton folds up on the train, bus and ferry and I ride it the rest of the way, passing through adorable towns where it seems feasible to consume clotted cream and scones hourly.
Sprint Mill Farm values symbiotic relationships between man and nature. It also achieves that between host and WWOOFer: I relish my experiences both on the farm and off it.
"I have this ridiculous belief that humankind could actually one day be a benefit to the planet rather than ravaging, pillaging, raping, despoiling," Acland muses.
He doesn't clobber you over the head with his philosophies, but his message grows on you. Like moss.
- - -
IF YOU GO
Cost: A one-year WWOOF U.K. membership costs $40 Cdn and grants access to a list of participant farms in England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales.
WWOOF U.K.: www.wwoof.org.uk
WWOOF Canada: www.wwoof.ca
Visiting Kendal: www.lakelandgateway.inf
Hill Top: www.nationaltrust.org.uk/hilltop
Online: WWOOFing in Action:
Find videos of Reb Stevenson's experiences in England at ottawacitizen.com
By Reb Stevenson, Ottawa Citizen; Canwest News ServiceFebruary 14, 2009
From: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/Technology/WWOOFing+England+Lake+District/1289143/story.html
Now this is green living.
Yeah, yeah, it's organic and all -- but that's not what I'm talking about.
It's the moss. The glorious emerald eco-carpet that sneaks its way onto every stone surface and infuses this landscape with a soft hint of neglect.
It's everywhere, anywhere. And it's enchanting.
As my cab navigates through Kendal and into the tiny village of Burneside, Cumbria, the taxi driver silently indulges my blathering.
It is my third week on the WWOOF (World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms) program, a global network of farms that allows you to exchange labour for accommodation and food.
You can WWOOF all over the world, but I'm doing it through WWOOF U.K. Sprint Mill Farm jumps out of the handbook because it lists "fun, variety, fulfilment and new experiences" as the work themes. Also, it is located in The Lake District, one of the U.K.'s prime tourist destinations.
A defunct mill, the farmhouse is damp, stony and clings to the bank of a gushing river. The whole place heaves with fertility.
Edward Acland runs Sprint Mill Farm with his doctor wife, Romola Stringer. Accommodation is in Acland's daughter's old bedroom in the main house. In the summer months, WWOOFers can sleep in the adjacent outbuilding.
Acland quickly ushers me into a kitchen that would make any Ikea enthusiast lash out with contempt.
It is furnished with a long wood table, a haphazard collection of glass jars stocked with mysterious contents, and a wood-burning stove most often seen in sepia photographs. This kitchen is truly the heart of the homestead.
And Acland, I soon decide, truly embodies the heart of what WWOOFing is all about.
Sprint Mill Farm is his 15-acre experiment in complete sustainability. He dabbles in coppicing (a traditional method of woodland management), animal-rearing, vegetable and fruit farming and woodcrafts.
None of it is for profit.
"It's about living off the interest and income of Mother Earth, but not using her capital," Acland explains. "We try to avoid using anything that we can't replace.
"It's jolly hard work, but very fulfilling," he says passionately.
As it turns out, WWOOFing at Sprint Mill barely even qualifies as work. After brief morning stints pitching in on the farm, I have the afternoons off.
"You can go for a walk, cycle, write, sleep ... whatever," says Acland. "It's not about exploiting a WWOOFer as a slave or labourer. It's about giving them the opportunity to experience a way of life."
And so Acland dons the mantle of mentor, not shift supervisor. He teaches me how to cut comfrey with a rusty old piece of machinery and how to forage for acorns, and eagerly shares his knowledge of green woodworking. We also have a go at weeding, apple picking and nettle-cutting.
As we trudge through the sopping landscape, Acland explains the cyclical processes that govern Sprint Mill.
For example, willow branches are fed to the goats, who gnaw off the leaves and bark. The stripped wood is used for fuel, and the goats produce milk, cheese and meat.
On the first day, bolstered by the altruistic urge to delve right into this Earth-appeasing lifestyle, I eat the goat cheese, pour goat milk into my tea and lavish my toast with goat butter. But, to borrow from Acland's earlier statement: it's jolly hard work.
By the second day, I'm wincing as I sip the tea, and gagging on the butter. To put it delicately, the flavour is evocative of an unlaundered athletic sock (to be fair, the meat isn't bad). But at least it's not a rodent: once a Moroccan WWOOFer insisted upon making good use of a squirrel that Acland caught.
"But it's a resource! It is organic!" he argued when Acland suggested a basic burial. So the WWOOFer whipped up a casserole and they had it for supper.
"I wouldn't rush at eating squirrel again," Acland laughs. "But there were messages there and I was thankful for that."
After a few days of digesting goat, I figure it's time to milk the situation. Literally.
One morning, Acland's wife leads me out to the shed for my virgin milking. A bit squeamish, I reach into the nether-area and grasp a fleshy protrusion.
"So I just yank?" I ask. "They tend to be fidgety with strangers," says Stringer. "You've just got to be firm."
I squeeze. The goat kicks a bit. But the teat squirts. Actually, it's kind of enjoyable.
Sprint Mill isn't in town, but Acland and Stringer provide wheels for their WWOOFers (bikes of course). I take full advantage of a Brompton; a London-made, folding bike.
I ride into Kendal, a favourite launching-point for hiking the nearby fells, the hills of the Lake District.
A visit to 13th-century Kendal Castle is rewarding -- for a full hour I have the ruins all to myself. Sweet!
Even sweeter: The Famous 1657 Chocolate House, where I self-medicate my goat-stricken palate with a sickening dose of chocolate. The menu consists of 20 chocolate beverages (embellished with spices, violet and the like) and 14 gateaux.
Another day, I venture out to Hill Top, Beatrix Potter's charming little home near Sawrey. The Brompton folds up on the train, bus and ferry and I ride it the rest of the way, passing through adorable towns where it seems feasible to consume clotted cream and scones hourly.
Sprint Mill Farm values symbiotic relationships between man and nature. It also achieves that between host and WWOOFer: I relish my experiences both on the farm and off it.
"I have this ridiculous belief that humankind could actually one day be a benefit to the planet rather than ravaging, pillaging, raping, despoiling," Acland muses.
He doesn't clobber you over the head with his philosophies, but his message grows on you. Like moss.
- - -
IF YOU GO
Cost: A one-year WWOOF U.K. membership costs $40 Cdn and grants access to a list of participant farms in England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales.
WWOOF U.K.: www.wwoof.org.uk
WWOOF Canada: www.wwoof.ca
Visiting Kendal: www.lakelandgateway.inf
Hill Top: www.nationaltrust.org.uk/hilltop
Online: WWOOFing in Action:
Find videos of Reb Stevenson's experiences in England at ottawacitizen.com
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