Saturday, September 23, 2017

Walker Homestead Antique Show

The Walker Homestead is an Antique Shop that people live in.  The 1st floor is the antique shop, the second floor is the living quarters.  Although they do actually live on the 1st floor as well.  A few times each year the have events such as this Antique Show or Christmas Open House, etc.  This is the first time Elly and I have been out there.


 The main house is the antique shop.  For events you park in the fields in the front of the house, while the dealers set up in the fields in back of the house.

Owners Setting up for the Show

We didn't get there for the opening, but here is how long the line was.  This place is literally out in the middle of nowhere, but people and dealers come from all over just for this show.  It features mostly the "primitive" style of antiques.

Line waiting to get in

 

People shopping during the show. The house is open and set up also.





Sitting Room


Living Room


Dining Room


The rear of the house.  This is where most of the dealers were

The Antique Dealer Booths


Reproduction Redware made by a local artist


Nice Display of Antique Stoneware





Elly at the Dried Herb Shed


Nice Primitive Santa's. These were $95 each!


The prices were very high, we did not buy anything.  The show gave us a good idea of whats people want and what dealers are selling.


Sunday, September 17, 2017

stART on The Street - Worcester

Every year for the past 15 years the City of Worcester closed down two blocks on Park Ave between Highland Street and Pleasant Street and has an Craft and Arts Festival called "stART on the Street".  Our neighbor was setting up there to sell her Batik Dyed T-shirts, so we decided to check it out. Being our first time there we did not know what to expect or what the parking situation was.


Our Neighbor's Booth at stART
 We decided to park in the neighborhood where I lived during my junior year in college at WPI with 3 other classmates. It was only 2 blocks from Park Ave. I hadn't  been back to the area in years. This is my old apartment building. I lived in the 4th floor, back then the side porch looked like it was about to fall down with at least a 30 degree pitch to the porch.  I am glad that they built a new porch.


When we got to Park Ave & Elm Park, the entire place was busy with shoppers and bands playing on three different stages. One at Elm Park, One at Elm & Park and the third at Pleasant & Park.


Large Crowds
  There were many vendors selling all type of crafts


Wind Chimes etc, made from old Silverplate Utensils
After shopping and seeing our neighbor, we ate lunch at The El Basha Restaurant, it was nice getting out of the heat and sitting in comfortable chairs for lunch rather than just eating Food Truck food and standing around or sitting on the grass or curb.  After lunch we went across the street to listen to the band that was playing.


After the band finished, they moved all the chairs & table aside to make room for The AsociaciĆ³n Carnavalesca de Massachusetts Dance Group that brings a bit of Dominican Carnival to the United States.  They are also called "Keeper of Tradition" keeping the Dominican culture alive.  The costumes were absolutely unbelievable!









 Very interesting dance cultural display.  Someone said that you could see more of this stuff at the Worcester Caribbean Festival in August. Will have to try to remember that next year.

They also had many street performers such as jugglers.


It was a great festival that we will have to attend next year again.

Saturday, September 16, 2017

The "Linkanoe" The Canoe That You Can Take Apart

Earlier this week I was at a local auction and purchased this "Linkanoe."  I had never seen one before this and knew nothing about it so I was intrigued and bought it.

The assembled canoe as I nought it. The boot is on the canoe.

 A Linkanoe is assembled by laying out all 10 sections, with all the red star sections on one side, all the whites on the other. There is a number painted on the inside of the hull along the keel line: place all 4 ONEs adjacent to each other, etc. Then clamp the red/white bow section together, and continue until all 5 segments are lined up. Next, pull these segments together and clamp them. Position the center thwart into its spring-loaded bracket, and likewise, install the seats into their respective brackets, giving them a hand-slap to lock into place. Lastly, the two deck plates are slid as far forward into the points as possible, and the eyebolt in the center is rotated so that the tang on the bottom of the bolt securely locks into the underside of the gunwale.


All the pieces. The 'boot" is rolled up on the left of the photo


Match up the numbers and attach the clamps
One side assembled

The canvas ‘boot’ is held onto the hull by stretching rubber rope over aluminum ‘furls’ that are screwed into the gunwale. The original canvas boots were made by the Eureka Tent Co. of Binghamton, NY, and were olive drab in color.


 
Both halves assembled, ready to join together

The completed Linkanoe without the Boot attached.



At the end of World War 2, Ed Link was searching for a way to keep his factories going and his employees working. He was a pilot and the inventor of the flight trainer, with the homebase of Link Aviation Devices in Binghamton, NY.  He owned a Grumman Widgeon floatplane and also enjoyed hunting and fishing. He had invented a sectional canoe that could be carried in the tail of his airplane so that after landing on a remote lake in Quebec, he could assemble the Linkanoe on the top of the wing, then paddle off to fish, or to a nearby cabin. So in 1945 he kept the branch factory at Gananoque, Ontario, busy by building these sectional canoes and square stern boats utilizing the same equipment and materials which had been used in building flight trainers