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Dry Stone Festival, October 8-10 2005 Pictures
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    Everything came together beautifully in the
running of the 2nd annual Northumberland Dry Stone Wall Festival held
on the Canadian Thanksgiving Weekend in Port Hope Ontario. At times it
definitely had the feel of a real Medieval festival. The number of
people turning out to see , and in many cases participate in, the dry
stone walling events which were organized for 2005 , increased
significantly from last year. The main focus was the building of a dry
stone Victorian folly on the property of Hill and Dale , Bed and
Breakfast, situated on several picturesque acres, right in Port Hope.
    The gothic arched structure which was started and completed
over the three day holiday weekend was built to complement the existing
dry stone bridge built last year. The crew that assembled to work on
the folly were masterful men and women from several countries, whose
skills all seemed to flow together in a kind of dry stone jazz
improvisation, to make an amazing permanent garden pavilion, in the
form of a dry stone ruin.
    From Switzerland, an exceptional waller, Dieter Schneider
joined us to help in the construction. From the United States, Chuck
Eblacker, having recently earned his advanced craftsman certification,
contributed significantly to our folly structure. Scottish dry stone
expert, Norman Haddow who helped us last year build Springdale bridge,
was on hand to encourage everyone and help in the construction. From
Canada, talented dry stone wallers Robin Thornrose, Hillary Martin
and John Storm joined in to add their expertise. And of course, we were
very pleased to have internationally recognized artist , Dan Snow join
the festivities, injecting the whole project with his creative input.
    The completed stone folly is delightfully reminiscent of the
Cistercian monasteries in Europe many of which have been destroyed (or
dissolved, as the English so elegantly put it) with only the bare
outlines of the structure left over. We are calling the folly
"Vestiges" , as it best describes this aspect of something having
remnants of the past, with only traces of structures long vanished. The
outlines of former lives, former habits, former customs all just
described by crumbling walls clinging to some fragile verticality.
    Elsewhere in Port Hope, gatherings of students assembled on
Saturday and Sunday to learn the craft of building dry stone walls,
being taught this year by John Shaw-Rimmington and Matthew Ring. A 75
foot section of beautiful wall was just about completed over the
weekend , at the residence of local council member John Moran . So many
people moving so much material! It was a bit like a barn raising.
    And back at the main festival site, wallers were being tested
for their intermediate certification.
    Special thanks to Fred, Deborah and Julian, the musicians
who came, dressed in period costume , and played so sensitively as we
constructed the folly. Thanks too, to the Evening Guide staff, Evelyn
Cream and Linda Eerme for the fantastic brochure design, all the people
who helped move the 60 ton of stone on to the sites , those who ran the
film night and the book tables and prepared and served lunches for
everyone.
    A final thank you to the many people of Port Hope and well
beyond, who presence helped to create that wonderful feeling of a
medieval market fair.










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