When
this blog post hits Facebook , I will have returned home from a week in
the Ozarks. I go there each April and each October, and bask in the beauty of
the place called Little Switzerland. I also attend a 3-day poetry retreat on
either end of both weeks’ stay.
Before
I left home, however, I determined to take flowers from the yard with me since
they would likely be gone by the time I returned. I found the largest container
on the place, filled it with water, picked a variety of flora and added stems
to the water. Now, how to get it to stay upright for four hours of driving? I
spied an old stewpot, placed the vase in the center, laid rolled-up dishtowels
about halfway up, then dropped hands full of marbles and colored stones until
the vase was solidly wedged in the pot. Voila!
At
dinner the day I arrived, I met a needle felter from Chicago. She was ending a
two-week residency at Dairy Hollow. Have any of you done needle felting? Do any
of you know a person who is a needle felter? I never heard of the phrase/
artistic process. [Google "needle felter": you might be amazed, too.]
This
68-year-old woman who flew into Highfill in North Arkansas, then took Fuzzy’s taxi
to Eureka Springs and Dairy Hollow, was surprised to be accepted at, she said,
a “writer’s colony.” But the director assured her there were other types of
creative activities that happened there. Fiber artists, composers, culinary
pursuits—all are welcome.
After
dinner, we “toured” each other’s suites, and I was lucky enough to actually see
what in the world she meant by different types of “felting.” Not the craft
store felt—“that’s crap,” she said. The basic material is actual sheep wool,
carded but not spun. It comes in long ropes the size of the old-timey coils
some women used to roll their long hair on and fasten around their heads.
After
that, we made plans to hike up the rough gravel path to the Crescent Hotel the
next morning with the aid of our hiking sticks. I wanted to buy a newspaper. We
did, talking all the time except when we needed to get our breaths back.
She was leaving at one p. m. At her door after
our hike, she said, “Wait a minute,” and soon brought out a little plastic bag
of six, needle-felted toy balls for cats. “Throw them in the air, then watch the
cats scamper after them.” I want to show them to someone before I give them to Greye and Bibbs.
Since
I had brought some copies of A Journey of Choice with me, I said, “Would you like one of my books?” Of
course, she said yes (what else could she say?). “I’ll read it on the plane
back to O’Hare.” Thus, a one-day acquaintance ended happily. We have already been in touch.
Another
bit of serendipity about our meeting: My second book, Her Face in the Glass, has a woman from Chicago
who moves to the Ozarks to pursue her yen for writing.
Is
that not a coincidence?
4 comments:
How cool! You didn't tell me abo9ut this! I'd love to see the felt things....
I'll post a photo.
What serendipity! I will certainly google this art I have never heard of.
Love the connection you made.
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