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Firing Log

ancient kiln | 21st century logbook

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November 26, 2006

Snow Day

Filed under: Kiln Cats, Studio, Firewood, General, shed — odin @ 4:51 pm

Winter has arrived somewhat earlier than normal — the snow has been falling since morning and there is no sign it will be letting up soon. It’s very pretty though and of more importance, the white blanket has relieved me from raking duty (the front yard is covered with bits of bark and wood chips from my latest wood chopping session — all of which are now happily hidden from view):

anagama kiln/studio and front yard covered in snow enlarge

While outside, the wind blows, tarps flap, and the shed rattles, inside is warm and cozy. The kiln cats are especially fond of the stove although after snapping this shot, I moved Stripe back from the fire a bit. Cats are flammable after all, and they are worringly inclined to snuggle right up to the glowing ceramic briquette (this shot is actually from yesterday but it snowed yesterday as well):

Kiln cats Stripe, Spot, and Little Nugget enjoy the fire enlarge

A word about the heater. I used to have a “Dyna Glo” heater which looked very similar to this one. Apparently however, it was designed to accept fuel only from the small disposable bottles. After 1.5 seasons of use connected to a 20 pound propane tank, it quit working altogether.

My new stove is a “Mr. Heater” and it’s designed to use propane from a bulk tank. As with any Mr. Heater device though, it’s rather noisy — it hisses quite a bit on the “high” setting, but tolerably so. On the “low” setting however, it makes such a painful high pitched whistle that I’ve decided the stove is either on “high” or “off” — “low” is unusable. Nothing is perfect: the Dyna Glo is quieter but only works with disposable bottles. The Mr. Heater is noisy but works with bulk tanks. Now, if someone would just build a quiet heater that could be connected to a 20# tank, I’d pay double!

And on the topic of fuel sources and payment — here is a shot from inside the studio looking out on the last few bits of the woodpile before I chopped it up. The payment? My wrists and fingers hurt after excessive bouts of repetitive stress, e.g., chopping wood. I think the picture is pretty though:

Firewood pile outside studio at anagama kiln enlarge

June 26, 2006

Busy Bees, Lethargic Me

Filed under: General — odin @ 7:37 pm

There isn’t a whole lot of excitement around the kiln recently. I’m making pots slowly as I try to avoid wilting in the recent heatwave to hit the NW corner of Washington State. I know many people live in regions with far higher temperatures, but I’m not acclimated to 83 F (28 C). When it’s this hot, I want to sit very still in front of a fan, as close to naked as seemly, and sip ice cold drinks.

In stark contrast, bees around the kiln are very busy. I should mention that the kiln site is nestled in amongst some berry fields — blueberry and raspberry to be precise. Every year, a bee keeper puts out some hives and the bees merrily do their thing. A couple days ago, a large contingent of the local bee population decided it was time for a change of scenery. They congregated on a small apple tree for a few hours, and then with an eerie atmospheric buzz, headed out for a new home.

swarm of bees

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