Thanks for stopping by and spending a part of your day with me here! Your comments keep me going as I'm trying really hard to keep up with all of this!
Tamiko's Thursday Teasers - Buttons, Brads and Bling!
Thanks for stopping by and spending a part of your day with me here! Your comments keep me going as I'm trying really hard to keep up with all of this!
Grateful Greetings
Tomorrow is another Tamiko's Thursday Teaser, so please also come back to peek at that creation.
Thank you for your visit today! Don't forget that sign ups for the 50 Tag class is on a first come, first served basis and I only cut 24 kits. Once they are gone, there will be no more. For those who asked what stamp sets we will be using for the class, I will have that information posted by Friday. Thanks for your patience!
Treasure Hunting At Crab Island
Dear Mr. Stemmer,
I apologize in advance for this lengthy email, but I read about your recent lecture regarding the Crab Island Fish Factory, and I thought you might be interested in some information I have to share.
My name is Craig White. My parents have owned a summer home in the Holgate section of LBI for almost 40 years where I spent most of my summers as a youth (we lived in Berwyn, PA during the winter). I am 44 now and live in Annapolis, MD with my wife and 3 children. We still visit the island often, and I am still as interested as ever in the island and surrounding area’s history. In particular, the old fish factory is still a strange fascination and poses somewhat of a mystery to me.
The reason for my email is that I have been ‘haunted’ by some treasures that I found there at low tide under the western-most bulkhead during a five-year period in the 1980’s. I think your research has provided me with a potential clue as to the source of the treasures (e.g. the island’s use as a possible dumping ground by the Atlantic City Garbage Co. in the 1920’s). I was hoping you could confirm my guess or provide me with any additional ideas.
Very briefly, I’ll give you the story of my visits there and then a description of some of the items. My childhood friend Jerry Zodl (Jerry now lives in Tuckerton) began visiting the fish factory in our early teens on days off from clamming for his parent’s clam ‘stand’ business on the island. We would drive my old 13 foot whaler over there at low tide. At first we wandered and explored the factory buildings, office (a free standing building at the rear quite a way back that few knew about) and dormitories. All the main buildings used to be very accessible until the fires in the 80s and 90s. On one trip we happened to explore the small beach on the western-most side of the plant. It is next to the bulkhead/pilings where most curiosity seekers tie up their boats. At low tide, although it was somewhat dark, you can walk under the pier/decking. In a stooped or kneeled position, poking through the mud, eyes scanning the ground intently, wearing our “fish factory sneakers” is where we spent most of our time on future, frequent visits to this spot. Serious erosion has impacted this section along the bulkhead/shoreline over the years which leads me to speculate the treasures we found are products of the material dumped there by the A.C. Garbage Co. which is now washing out of the banks.
We dragged back thousands of items over the five-year period that we frequented the place. I still have boxes of carefully packed items – many junk. But, some of the more interesting items I found and still have in my possession include:
· Various silver coins – earliest date 1898, latest date 1926
· 2 separate sets of gold dental caps with bits of human teeth intact (MORE ABOUT THIS BELOW)
· 3 rings (one gold with initials ECC, another gold, and one silver with Chinese lettering)
· Various pieces of silverware, many with names of hotels stamped on them (ones says Hotel Knickerbocker. I think this was an A.C. hotel)
Knickerbocker Hotel in Atlantc City· Various child’s toys (glass marbles and lead cars and trains)
· Various small bottles of all types (many medicine bottles), including many that still had corks intact that appear to have been preserved in the sludge from which they protruded. One such bottle is a cobalt blue Milk of Magnesia bottle dated 1906 which sits on a shelf in my office today to remind me of the good times I had “treasure hunting”.
I enclose a few pictures of some of the above items.
BottlesCoinsRings & TeethMy friend Jerry had equally impressive finds (although no gold teeth!) including a gold-engagement style ring (missing the stone), silver coins and an Atlantic City Taxi Cab badge.
As you can imagine, the rings and teeth have me truly puzzled. If it had been just one single such ‘find’, I would have chalked it up to the strong currents there washing ashore an item dropped from a boat. But, in this case there seems to be a pattern with the numerous items. And, this is only what we found ... every trip seemed to turn up something new... I am sure there is more laying there unfound. The gold teeth were found on separate trips several years apart although within 20 yards of each other. The larger set of teeth sends a shiver down my spine as it appears to have been fit over several molar teeth (4 in all). It is hard to imagine this slipped out of a living or conscious person’s mouth. Over the years my family has joked with me that I have Jimmy Hoffa’s teeth, and that I best “lay low.” I recall that there were old bones there under the pier but most looked to be from animals. On occasion, I have considered contacting the area police to see if there are any old, unsolved missing person’s cases in the area. Although, with the information about the A.C. Garbage Company’s use of the property in the 20’s, this gives me a new direction to consider.
Well, that’s my story and information. Any guidance or suggestions you can offer with respect to the mystery of the gold teeth is appreciated. I have many more details of our visits. I would be happy to share more details with you if you are interested.
Thank you for your time.
Sincerely,
Craig White
Annual 50 Tag Class - Sneak Peek!
Here's what will be in your kits - ALL the materials (cardstock (all pieces for each tag), embellishments, use of stamps, diecuts, punches/tools) to complete 50 tags (string/ribbon included) and cute and fun containers to hold the tags. You will also receive a kit to make a fun bonus project!
RSVP will be by a first come, first served basis and I have cut only 24 kits. The cost for this annual tag kit will be $40.00. To RSVP, please send me an email (include the date you'd like to attend the class). I will confirm your reservation and ask that you please promptly send your payment to me upon confirmation. My address will be provided to you via email. I am asking for your payment in advance as this will help me pay for all of the materials. Thank you for your cooperation!
Because I've been struggling with juggling time for everything that I need to do, kits to go will only be allowed under this condition. The kit will be sold as assembled for class and no images will be stamped. I thought about this for a long time and the reality is that I cannot stamp 50 images for each kit to go and still keep my sanity. So, if you are interested in the kit to go, you will receive the kit without stamped images. As a suggestion, you can substitute a stamp set or you just might have the images that I used! The cost will still be $40.00 and I ask that you add $5.00 for shipping.
Demonstrators' cost is $20.00 and if you are requesting a kit to go, the same policy applies and I also ask that you add the $5.00 shipping fee.
In case you might be wondering why the cost for demonstrators is half of the cost, that is the standard courtesy for demonstrators. If you are interested in becoming a demonstrator so that you can also reap this benefit, email me for more information to join my group! Right now is the perfect time to join because there are a couple of really cool freebies offered when you sign up!
Thank you so much for your understanding.
I can't wait to share all of the tags with you this year. I had fun creating them for you and know that you will love the finished tags!
Sharing something sweet!
Today, I am sharing some sweet candy holders with you. I used SU's newest die called candy wrapper. It is so simple and fun to make. I made a whole bunch this weekend too! I used one of our new punches for this one - love this bat! Used some DSP for this one and an image from the Batty for You stamp set.
Food Matters
Pike Place Market in Seattle |
- To begin by responding to my friend’s comment about eating being so basic: It is because eating is so fundamental, so intimate, that it matters so much that we pay attention. The more we allow a basic element of life to be warped and abused, the more we ourselves become distorted.
- Americans have a particularly tenuous relationship with food. It is amazing to me the full spectrum of distorted relationships that exist. While many of the food critics out there focus on the ecological problems of food production, many overlook our problems with obesity (and all the health issues related to it), people who struggle with addiction to food (even if they are not overweight), and so many who deprive themselves of nourishment, withholding food for control and distorted body images. Our nation clearly has an eating disorder; perhaps, more then one.
- Most of us are far enough removed from agricultural ancestors that we don’t know what cows and pigs are supposed to eat, nor what they’re fed now, or how to slaughter and clean an animal for our consumption. Wendell Berry might encourage us to look into this and ask us what that does to our bodies, the earth, and our community. Michael Pollan may ask us to forage our own mushrooms and hunt our own boar. But another voice recognizes the reality that these things are not possible for all of us, and we do have a world of 7 billion people to feed!
Mining Ancient Cedar
John Simkins in the Great Swamp in Washington Township stands by a large cedar tree that is immense by today's standards but smaller than the ancient cedars buried in the muck and swamps of southern New Jersey.
A BURIED CEDAR FOREST
MINING FOR LOGS IN A NEW JERSEY SWAMP
NOVEL INDUSTRY AT DENNISVILLE IN DIGGING UP VALUABLE TREES COVERED UP MANY AGES AGO
DENNISVILLE, N.J. Oct 5 – An industry the like of which does not exist anywhere else in the world furnishes scores of people in this part of New Jersey with remunerative employment, and has made comfortable fortunes for many citizens. It is the novel business of mining cedar trees – digging from far beneath the surface immense logs of sound and arematic cedar. The fallen and submerged cedar forests of Southern New Jersey were discovered first beneath the Dennisville swamps 75 years ago, and have been a source of constant interest to geologists and scientists generally ever since. There are standing at the present day no such enormous specimens of the cedar anywhere on the face of the globe as are found embedded in the deep muck of the Dennisville swamps. Some of the trees have been uncovered measuring six feet in diameter, and trees four feet through are common.
Although ages must have passed since these great forests fell and became covered many feet beneath the surface, such tress as fell, according to the scientific theory, while they were yet living trees are as sound today as they were the day of their uprooting. Such trees are called “windfalls” in the nomenclature of the cedar mines, as it is thought they were torn up by the roots during some terrible gale of an unknown past. Others are found in the wreck that were evidently dead trees when they fell, and to these the miners have given the name of “break-downs.” The peculiar action of the wind and the water in the swamp has kept these break-downs in the same stage of of decay they were in when they fell as the same agency has preserved intact the soundness of the living trees.
The theory of those who have made this mysterious collection of buried cedar trees a study is that they in some unknown age formed a vast forest that grew in a fresh-water lake or swamp that covered this portion of New Jersey the properties of the soil of which were necessary to the forest's existence. According to Clarence Deming and Dr. Maurice Beasely, eminent geological authorities in Southern New Jersey, the sea either broke in upon the swamps or the land subsided and the salt water reached the trees. This destroyed the life of many of them, and subsequently some prehistoric cyclone swept over the forest and leveled it to the earth. The heavy trees gradually sunk into the soft soil of the swamps until they reached the substantial earth or rock beneath it, where they reposed, unknown and undisturbed, until their presence was accidentally discovered in 1812. Ever since ten the logs have been mined and have been an important factor in the commercial and business prosperity of South Jersey.
The buried forest lies at various depths in the swamp, and the uncovering of the trees or working the “cedar mine” is done in a very simple and easy manner. The log miner enters the swamp and prods in the soft soil with a long, sharp iron rod. The trees lie so thickly beneath the surface that the rod cannot be pushed down amiss on its testing errand, for the prodding is not so much in search of a tree as it is to test whether the tree is a “windfall” or a “break-down.” When the prod strikes the log the miner chips off a piece with the sharp point of the tool, which brings the chip or splinter to the surface when drawn out of the muck. By the appearance and order of this chip the miner can tell at once whether the tree he has tested is a sound or dead one. If the former, he quickly ascertains the length of the trunk by prodding along from one end of it to the other.
That ascertained, he proceeds at once to raise the log from its hidden bed. He works down through the mud a saw similar to those used in sawing out ice in filling an icehouse. With this he saws the log in two as near the roots as he cares to. The top of the tree is next sawed off in the same way, and then the big cedar stick is ready to be released from its resting place. A ditch is dug down to the log, the trunk is loosened by cant hooks, and it rises with the water to the surface of the ditch. A curious thing is noticed about these logs when they come to the surface, and that is they invariably turn over with their bottom sides up. After mining the log is easily “snaked out” of the swamp and is ready for the mill or factory.
These ancient trees are of a white variety of cedar, and when cut have the same aromatic flavor intensified many degrees that the common red cedar of the present day has. The wood is of a delicate flesh color. One of the mysterious characteristics of these long-sunken trees is that not one has ever been found to be waterlogged in the slightest. It is impossible to tell how many layers deep these cedars lie in the swamps, but it is certain that there are several layers, and that with all the work that has been done in constantly mining them during three-quarters of a century the first layer has not yet been removed from the depths. At some places in the Dennisville swamp the soil has sunk in several feet and become dry, and there the fallen cedars may be seen lying in great heaps, one upon the other. No tree has ever been removed from the Dennisville swamp from a greater depth than five feet, but outside the limits of the swamp they have been found at a great depth, which shows the correctness of the deep-layer theory. Near the shore of the Delaware, eight miles from Dennisville, white cedar logs have been exhumed from a depth of 12 feet. At Cape May, 20 miles distant, drillers of an artesian well struck one of the trees 90 feet below the surface. It was lying in an alluvial deposit similar to the Dennisville swamp. Another log was found at Cape May 20 feet below the surface, and a third at a depth of 70 feet. These deeply-buried logs were among the largest ever brought to light and their location so far away from Dennisville marsh indicates the great extent of that ancient forest area.
The uses to which the cedar logs are put are many. The principal use is the making of shingles and staves. The longevity of articles made from the wood is shown in shingles, tubs, pails, and casks made from it over 70 years ago, and which have yet to show the slighest indication of decay. The shingles and staves are worked into shape entirely by hand, the only machine work that is permitted in manipulating the cedar logs being sawing of them into proper lengths for the uses to which the lumber is to be put. The Dennisville cedar shingles command a price much higher than the best pine or chestnut shingles.
What it is in the amber-colored swamp water and red muck at Dennisville that preserves these trees so that, after the lapse of centuries, their fibre is as clean and smooth and strong as it was when the green branches of the cedar were waving over the swamp is a mystery that scientific men have yet been unable to solve.
New York Times – October 5, 1888
[ Transcribed by Peter H. Stemmer.]
Garden for Mom and the spider is back!
Health Update
Tuesday on Thursday
I used my photo corner punch (retired SU), oval punches, pearls and rhinestones. The sentiment came from part of stamp by Inkadinkado.
Short post today, so much to catch up on. If you liked my card today and want to see more cards featuring nesties, please take a look at what the Creative Team came up with - you can see all of the creations on Tamiko's blog right HERE! Thank you to all of you who have supported the team in our efforts to share some inspiration with you!
I will be posting a bunch of Halloween projects that I managed to work on with the little time I had this past week. I also worked on the samples for the tag class so I will be doing a sneak peek shortly. I will also be posting information on the tag class (date, time, cost, etc.) so stay tuned. Thanks to all of you for your patience on my mini absence from posting. You will see what I've been up to in the days to come. Take care and Big hugs to you!
Tamiko's Thursday Teasers - The Challenge is back!
Here is what I came up with. I used Ruby and Travel Anya which you can get at Tamiko's online store. This is the first time that I altered images so I was kind of nervous, but it turned out not too bad, don't you think? I found a tutorial to make this cute little suitcase by Suzanne Dean. Her blog is called Scrap Bitz. You can find the tutorial HERE.
Here's a view of the suitcase a little opened. It was very fun and easy to make.
Christmas Tag Monthly Swap
If you are interested in participating in this easy and fun monthly swap, please go and check out Kyoko's blog right HERE.
Thanks for coming by today! Be sure you pop back in tomorrow for another exciting Tamiko's Thursday Teaser! This week, we are starting up the Tamiko Challenge again so you don't want to miss it! There's a prize offer too!
August one card swap!
Thankful Me!
Anyhoo, with Wini's help, I was able to mass produce these pretty cards. I'm loving the butterfly and the pearls that adorn it.
Thanks for taking a peek here today! Wishing you a nice week!
BETTER LATE THAN NEVER!
I'm so shame that I didn't get a chance to post these wonderful and thoughtful birthday gifts from friends. Please forgive the tardiness! Thank you and BIG hugs to all of you for the sweet birthday wishes for this old girl!
This special brak came from my GF Jenny of Hilo. Thank you so much jenny! I love this pretty pink box and all of the goodies inside! Woweeee!
This is the card that came with the gift, I just love these Lily of the Valley images, so sweet!
Got a pretty Coach pink wrist purse from my GF Joann. We go waaayyyy back, yeah Jo? Thank you so much for this special gift and for the ono lunch too! We really need to get together again. Call me, K?
These goodies are from Janis. When this score buddy came out, I thought about getting it and then changed my mind because I said I didn't need it. I know I don't need it, but it's always fun to have more toys to play with, right? Thanks Janis, I love the little bottles of glue too!
From my sweet friend, Brenda. I love this cute little punched octopus! You are such a genius to think up these cute punched animals! Thank you also for all of the goodies too!
What a sweet box from my GF Denise. Thank you so much! Love this box to hold little treasures, and thanks for the sweet gift inside too!
More sweet gifts! This cute easel box is from my GF Joni. I love it! Thanks so much for the treats inside the box too!
Wasn't this a sticky post? Full of so much sweetness! hehe! Thanks again friends for a wonderful birthday celebration!
Also wanted to give a shout out to thank the girls who attended my Sunday class in August for surprising me with a little birthday luncheon, that was so sweet of you!
Trying to catch up here with my posting, so hopefully next week, I'll have more to share with you. I'll be working on my christmas tag class samples.
Stay tuned for my August OCS card from my new friend, KaRen and also for the tags I received from my partner Sharon for the tag swap! Bear with me, I'm trying hard to catch up on things.
Thanks for sticking with me and for stopping by today!!
FREE CRAFT TOTE!
By the way, I gave my other tote bag away to a good home (happy face!)
Tamiko's Thursday Teasers - Sketch using TGF or CC Design images
The Dazzle
Narwhal Art Projects is located at 680 Queen Street West, and the show runs until Oct 17th... You can visit the gallery's website here...
Below is the invite, my piece, and a bunch of work that my friends will be showing... click on any of the images to make them larger...