We held the second annual Fox Hunt 9aka drag-hunt) at our farm again this year - here's a photo. There were no animals harmed in this event - the trail was laid down by towing a scent-rag by all-terain vehicle.
There was also a photo on the front page of today's Guardian Newspaper of the horses and hounds out on the trail. See their website: www.theguardian.pe.ca
This blog displays the various period reproduction projects and events I am involved in. I have been collecting historic clothing, and making reproduction period clothing, since the summer I portrayed the Father of Confederation Andrew A. MacDonald for the 125th Anniversary celebrations of the birth of Canada. This blog began in 2010 to mark the 100th Anniversary of Lucy Maud Montgomery's marriage and our reproduction project creating the outfits in her wedding trousseau.
Monday, 22 October 2012
Monday, 10 September 2012
Am off to Green Gables House today
I will be working parttime at Green Gables House in Cavendish the next couple of weeks to help with tours doing animations.
I've been helping with off-season tours of the Green Gables house through Parks and People for the past 25 years and always enjoy telling the story of the house, LM Montgomery and Anne of Green Gables - the reaction of visitors is sometimes overwhelming as you see them enter the house and see them realizing their dream.
Below is a link to Green Gables House from the Prince Edward Island government website: http://www.gov.pe.ca/greengables/
I've been helping with off-season tours of the Green Gables house through Parks and People for the past 25 years and always enjoy telling the story of the house, LM Montgomery and Anne of Green Gables - the reaction of visitors is sometimes overwhelming as you see them enter the house and see them realizing their dream.
Below is a link to Green Gables House from the Prince Edward Island government website: http://www.gov.pe.ca/greengables/


See also Green Gables Website: http://www.pc.gc.ca/eng/lhn-nhs/pe/greengables/visit.aspx
Sunday, 9 September 2012
Lavender
I came across this poem the other day in the GRACE Magazine, Summer 2012 issue (published in ChristChurch, Dorset, England) www.gracepublishing.net
Lavender, sweet lavender;
Come and buy my lavender,
Hide it in your trousseau, lady fair.
Let its lovely fragrance flow
Over you from head to toe,
Lightening your eyes, your cheek, your hair...
by Cumberland Clark, Flower Song Book 1929
Update
It's been a great summer at our Cavendish motel. A few of the big groups we hosted this summer were: Atlantic Canada Students - 2nd Annual Sears Drama Festival; guests to the Country Music Festival; soccer teams for big soccer tournament in Hunter River; a walking group from Nova Scotia - along with all the wonderful people we had come stay with us from the Maritimes, central and western Canada and folks from all around the world. Here's the motel below... http://bayvista.ca/
Below are photos of me from the 125th Anniversary year of celebrations. I portrayed the youngest Father of Confederation, Andrew A. MacDonald from Georgetown. That summer I had a small part at the end of a play about Confederation at the Confederation Center of the Arts - at the end of the performance we rose up from the orchestra pit, the Fathers of Confederation were sitting around a conference table - it was a wonderful experience.
The motel will soon be closing soon for the season and I'll be going back home to Pleasant Valley and getting back in to my old routines, ie. costuming, getting ready for winter, parttime at Marks, etc., etc.
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In the summer of 2014 Prince Edward Island will be celebrating the 150th Anniversary of the Charlottetown Conference where the idea of Canada was born. Check out the website. http://www.pei2014.com/joinusBelow are photos of me from the 125th Anniversary year of celebrations. I portrayed the youngest Father of Confederation, Andrew A. MacDonald from Georgetown. That summer I had a small part at the end of a play about Confederation at the Confederation Center of the Arts - at the end of the performance we rose up from the orchestra pit, the Fathers of Confederation were sitting around a conference table - it was a wonderful experience.
Saturday, 17 March 2012
Cook's Outfit for Beaconsfield House
We've been working on a couple of Cook's Outfits for one of the vignettes they will be doing at historic Beaconsfield House in Charlottetown this summer. The outfit includes a blouse, skirt and two aprons. We will be doing a fitting early next week.
This white apron would be worn when serving in the Dining Room and at formal occasions.
This white apron would be worn when serving in the Dining Room and at formal occasions.
The darker, stripped apron would be worn in the Kitchen when the Cook is doing heavier and messier jobs.
For more information about 1877 Beaconsfield:
The following photos are from Google Images of Beaconsfield
For more information about the history of Beaconsfield, see:
Thursday, 8 March 2012
Arnold receives Lt. Governor's Award at TIAPEI Awards Gala
Hey, Carter here, once in a while I help Arnold with his blog!
I'd like to tell that Arnold Smith received the Lieutenant Governor's Award for excellence in Tourism from the Tourism Industry Association of P.E.I. (TIAPEI) last evening at their Annual Awards Gala. His award was the last to be presented (the best for last) and following a slide show telling of his accolades, he accepted the award from the Lt. Governor Frank Lewis to a standing ovation.
In true Arnold form, he flew off to Ottawa this afternoon to represent Prince Edward Island along with a few other Islanders at the Annual Tourism Trade Show. As an Island friend living in Ottawa always says about Arnold at the Trade show, "he's the hardest working man at the trade show."
Congratulation on your Award Arnold. On the Guardian's website today is the following article: http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/Business/2012-03-08/article-2920250/TIAPEI-Awards-go-to-12-operators/1
Below are a few photos I took last evening.
I'd like to tell that Arnold Smith received the Lieutenant Governor's Award for excellence in Tourism from the Tourism Industry Association of P.E.I. (TIAPEI) last evening at their Annual Awards Gala. His award was the last to be presented (the best for last) and following a slide show telling of his accolades, he accepted the award from the Lt. Governor Frank Lewis to a standing ovation.
In true Arnold form, he flew off to Ottawa this afternoon to represent Prince Edward Island along with a few other Islanders at the Annual Tourism Trade Show. As an Island friend living in Ottawa always says about Arnold at the Trade show, "he's the hardest working man at the trade show."
Congratulation on your Award Arnold. On the Guardian's website today is the following article: http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/Business/2012-03-08/article-2920250/TIAPEI-Awards-go-to-12-operators/1
TIAPEI Awards go to 12 operators
Arnold Smith, left, of Bay Vista Motel and Cottages receives the Lt. Gov. award from the Tourism Industry Association of P.E.I. represented by Don Cudmore, executive director and Elaine Thomson, president. The award was presented during the associaiton's annual awards gala dinner at the Delta Prince Edward.
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Andrews Hockey Growth Programs received the 2012 Premier’s Award for Tourism in recognition of its long-standing contribution to the industry by attracting thousands of hockey players to the province each year. Andrews Hockey Growth accepted the award at the 31st annual Tourism Industry Association of P.E.I. Conference and Awards gala Wednesday night in Charlottetown.
The evening saw 12 awards presented as the tourism industry celebrated the achievements of its members.
The Premier’s Award is presented annually to an operator or business that has moved the industry forward and inspired others to do the same.
Previous award winners include the Rollo Bay Fiddle Festival, Cows Ice Cream and the New Glasgow Lobster Suppers.
“The tourism industry on Prince Edward Island encompasses a huge variety of businesses that work to build a stronger Island economy and create jobs for Islanders,” said Tourism and Culture Minister Robert Henderson.
“Andrews Hockey is a respected institution across North America and has experienced incredible growth over the past 33 years.”
Parks Canada presented the 2012 Sustainable Tourism Award to David and Michelle Thompson, operators of Dalvay-by-the-Sea Hotel from 1976 to 2010.
The Thompsons were leaders in the tourism industry and won several awards for the high-end resort hotel and dining facilities. The Thompsons encouraged appreciation and respect for the heritage of Dalvay-by-the-Sea National Historic Site by sharing its story with visitors through personal guided tours that described all aspects of the workmanship of the building and its colourful past.
The final presentation of the evening was the Lieutenant Governor’s Award to Arnold Smith, Bay Vista Motel & Cottages.
Below are a few photos I took last evening.
Above: Arnold receiving award from Hon. Frank Lewis.
Above: Arnold with his sister Vivian and her husband Fulton Younker (co-owers of the Bay Vista Motel & Cottage www.bayvista.ca )
Above: The end of the slide show about Arnold - I supplied the photo.
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Photo below: Donna Williams (potato fudge maker) and Arnold at 2011 Tourism Trade Show in Ottawa.
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Photo below: Donna Williams (potato fudge maker) and Arnold at 2011 Tourism Trade Show in Ottawa.
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Thursday, 23 February 2012
Flat irons
Below is a photo of my kitchen stove where I have two flat irons - they're for decoration and not for daily use. I often marvel at the strength the house wife in the old days as she had to lift heavy cast iron pots, kettles and irons.
http://www.oldandinteresting.com/antique-irons-smoothers-mangles.aspx
Flat irons, sad irons
Below is a small Hand Iron.
Below is a 20-pound Taylor's Iron with a twisted iron handle - heavy weight!!
Below is more information about IRONS from:http://www.oldandinteresting.com/antique-irons-smoothers-mangles.aspx
Flat irons, sad irons
Black smiths started forging simple flat irons in the late Middle Ages. Plain metal irons were heated by a fire or on a stove. Earthenware and terracotta were also used, from the Middle East to France and the Netherlands.
Flat irons were also called sad irons or smoothing irons. Metal handles had to be gripped in a pad or thick rag. Some irons had cool wooden handles and in 1870 a detachable handle was patented in the US. This stayed cool while the metal bases were heated and the idea was widely imitated. Cool handles stayed even cooler in "asbestos sad irons". The sad is sad iron (or sadiron) is an old word for solid, and in some contexts this name suggests something bigger and heavier than a flat iron. Goose or tailor"s goose was another iron name, and this came from the goose-neck curve in some handles. In Scotland people spoke or gusing (goosing) irons.
You'd need at least two irons on the go together for an effective system: one in use, and one re-heating. Large households with servants had a special ironing-stove for this purpose. Some were fitted with slots for several irons, and a water-jug on top.
At home, ironing traditional fabrics without the benefit of electricity was a hot, arduous job. Irons had to be kept immaculately clean, sand-papered and polished. They must be kept away from burning fuel, and he regularly but lightly greased to avoid rusting. Beeswax prevented irons sticking to starched cloth. Constant care was needed over temperature. Experience would help decide when the iron was hot enough, but not so hot that it would scorch the cloth. A well-known test was spitting on the hot metal, but Charles Dickens described someone with a more genteel technique in The Old Curiosity Shop. She held "the iron at an alarmingly short distance from her cheek, to test its temperature...."
Flat irons were also called sad irons or smoothing irons. Metal handles had to be gripped in a pad or thick rag. Some irons had cool wooden handles and in 1870 a detachable handle was patented in the US. This stayed cool while the metal bases were heated and the idea was widely imitated. Cool handles stayed even cooler in "asbestos sad irons". The sad is sad iron (or sadiron) is an old word for solid, and in some contexts this name suggests something bigger and heavier than a flat iron. Goose or tailor"s goose was another iron name, and this came from the goose-neck curve in some handles. In Scotland people spoke or gusing (goosing) irons.
You'd need at least two irons on the go together for an effective system: one in use, and one re-heating. Large households with servants had a special ironing-stove for this purpose. Some were fitted with slots for several irons, and a water-jug on top.
At home, ironing traditional fabrics without the benefit of electricity was a hot, arduous job. Irons had to be kept immaculately clean, sand-papered and polished. They must be kept away from burning fuel, and he regularly but lightly greased to avoid rusting. Beeswax prevented irons sticking to starched cloth. Constant care was needed over temperature. Experience would help decide when the iron was hot enough, but not so hot that it would scorch the cloth. A well-known test was spitting on the hot metal, but Charles Dickens described someone with a more genteel technique in The Old Curiosity Shop. She held "the iron at an alarmingly short distance from her cheek, to test its temperature...."
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