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Let's take time to regroup.
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There is a difference between just "taking up the space" and actually
"packing the space"
between all the stones inside a dry stone wall. The distinction is
quite important. Perhaps
a way to better understand this is to consider the analogy of packing
a van on moving day.
If we are careful, and stack things inside each other, it is possible
to move all of the
furniture we have in just one truck load. If we are rushed or not
paying attention to how
things can fit together, our truck may only be able to hold half the
things we want to take
with us.
Building a wall is an exercise in regrouping . The mass of stones
which have been
randomly gathered or dumped in a pile onto our property are going to
be regrouped into a
much smaller space. There is something inherently pleasing about this
undertaking.
Regrouping stones can often become a visual or physical equivalent to
regrouping
mentally or emotionally. We are taking the time to turn the seemingly
random aspects of
our lives into some well organized structural pattern. Regrouping is a
fundamental part of
our sense of well being and contentment. If we can watch what we are
doing during wall
building we can better understand what regrouping involves in the more
complex and
abstract applications of daily life.
First off, we are not just piling stones together. Stones plopped
together or even placed
next to, and onto, one another do not make for a properly built wall.
All the stones in the middle of the wall, and many of these are the smallest ones, need to
all be fitted and packed
adjacent to one
another in such a way as to densely reinforce the space between larger
'building stones'.
Ideally there should be little or no space between any stones (big or
small) in our wall. This
is done primarily so that the wall will last a long time without
falling down.
We are looking especially for the places (gaps) that occur under the
stones that we have
placed in our wall, where a similar shaped hearting piece can fit
and eliminate the
possibility of those stones slipping or slumping. The more exactly the
space is filled the
better the structure. Placing one uniquely shaped stone to fill a
specific gap instead of
having two stones placed to fit the same cavity, is a far better
solution. Small wedge shaped
stones particularly fit and tighten up better into all those V shaped
gaps that commonly
occur between the stones we are building with, whether they are
roundish stones or flat
ones.
Packing is an art. In the process of building a wall we are refining
our skills and getting
better and better at this craft of fitting shapes together. Much of
the art of the wall will
be unseen within the wall, much of the complexity will go
undiscovered, and much of how
we build the wall will be a mystery to those who come along after to
see the finished
masterpiece. The creative process has been primarily one of seeing how
that which seems
infinite can be squeezed into a section of the finite, thus
recapturing a sense of simple
wonder and ordered beauty
What we are doing too is like an intricate mosaic. It takes time and
patience. We should be
trying to get the pieces to fit more an more like inlaid wood or
marble rather than placing
chunks of kindling into a firewood box . In any case what we are doing
is definitely not like
shoveling gravel into a hole .
It would be enough to concede that carefully fitted and stacked stones
make the best
walls; that this activity of regrouping stones is actually enjoyable
and therapeutic in itself,
says a lot about who we are as humans. We are a species of
regroupers . Is this concept
so strange? I think not. If nothing else it is just giving a broader
meaning to a rather
quaint term used to describe early man. We, dry stone wallers, are
the new hunter/
gatherers, densely gathering and compacting the stone shapes we have
been hunting for.
We are those who see the need to stop and regroup . All the
piles of
aggregated confusion around us may not be as big as we think. Anyway, let's
take the time to sort
things out.
Letting the dust settle is just the beginning; next we have to gather
it and pack it and
build with it again.
Come on then, let's regroup.
Submitted by john shaw-rimmington
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