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Taking Shelter and Pleasure in our Craft
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The Farfarers ancient boat-stone shelter came about due to the good
will, financial and
professional support, hard work and enthusiasm of a large and
diverse group of people
drawn together for many reasons.
In the beginning it got " off the ground" due to the enormous
affection and respect a great number of us feel in Canada for Farley
and Claire Mowat,
both their long contributions to Canadian literature and their
connection of many years to
Port Hope.
We came together to find the right boat, bring it to Port Hope,
remaking it to play the part of an ancient walrus hide covered boat,
strong enough to
cross the north Atlantic.
Other people heard about the project and contributed the stone the
site and the funding
to make this thing happen
Dry stone wallers, both professional craftsmen and women came
together on
Canadian Thanksgiving weekend over the three days of the festival.
They came from many
parts of the world to build the curve
shaped dry stone foundation for the longhouse structure .
On the third day the boat hull was lifted on to its dry stone base
and the entire structure
was completed on schedule.
My hope is that this project will be a monument both to Farley
Mowet , whose imagination and skill brought the story of Alban
explorers back to life and a reminder to us of the vital role of
imagination, creativity and inspired thinking (with which we are all
blessed with ) plays in our lives together. It took a community of
different skills to bring
this thing to life.
It is difficult to know what to call the actual structure.
Just what is it exactly?
Hopefully it represents a variety of things to different people.
Perhaps the fact that it is a 'double-ender' is a clue to its
importance and meaning for me.
The term 'double-ender' suggests looking at the sailing craft from
two different angles,
and thinking about being able to call either end the front or bow.
The shape itself suggests that those in the vessel have a choice in
the direction they
choose
to head. It is a structure that already has some adaptability to
its shape.
Continuing this analogy, as a simple curved shaped craft itself it
can in fact be adapted
from a sea worthy sailing vessel to a safe shelter in a hostile land.
So too, the rocks along the hazardous coast of Arctic Canada, are
perceived as not just
something to be avoided but in fact, a useful building material.
The skills needed for sailing the craft are now readapted from those
requiring
'seamanship' to those requiring a different kind of craftsmanship and
ingenuity.
We all have this ability.
We all have a craft that we venture out on the sea of life in.
We have to 'go the distance' in our craft, whether it be a chosen
craft or one we have more
of less found ourselves 'out at sea' in.
Like these early sea farers, we can't always turn back, we have to
take our craft further and
further, out of necessity,
whether it be further across the Atlantic in search of walrus skins
or just further along the course that somehow seems set for us.
Here in Canada I've found myself called to initiate and steer this
dry stone walling
organization/festival/craft thing to some sort of destination.
It seems almost inevitable that I have to pursue projects of this
type. ( dreaming up ideas
and organizing the building of various massive stone structures)
Others are compelled to develop their 'craft' too.
If nothing else it is a kind of natural development, and in this, it
seems to me there are
three important aspects,
imagination, creativity and craftsmanship
and they carry us all along the way.
And they often carry us past the safe waters of home, well beyond
ordinary and
predictable outcomes.
Life, (in our particular craft) involves taking risks and seeing a
vision through to the end.
At some point on this adventure, usually out of necessity, because
we can't always return
or at least, can't always go back when we want ,
at these landmark occasions, we have to look at our 'craft' in a
totally different way.
We have to think outside the box, or think inside an upside down
boat!
We have to look at our boat as a resource more useful to us now as
something that, for
the time being anyway, 'wont be floating'
'The boat that wouldnt float' may, in fact , be a good thing
Farley's actual boat that wouldnt float was the inspiration for a
wonderful book.
Almost certainly , as a book, in the long haul, it was more
entertaining, gave more
'pleasure' and from Farley, was more a gift to others than it would
have been, had he
owned just an ordinary , uninteresting boat that did float!
' Our craft ', that sometimes looks like it wont float , or it isnt
floating, may be the very
thing it needs to be, or that very gift to others it needs to be.
That upside-down-boat on that pile of what looks like useless rocks
can be that very
something too, that gets us through a season of harshness and
coldness and bareness
As a craft it is a 'Dual Purpose Object.' both, Vessel in uncharted
sea, and Hospice
through the winter of unknowing.
We are all craftsmen and women
We all need to look at our crafts in different ways sometimes.
We need to be flexible, adaptive, try to welcome change, and we need
to see the situation,
ourselves, our surroundings, the rocks around us and the boats tied
up to them,
- everything,
in a different light.
Submitted by John Shaw-Rimmington
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