Friday, September 29, 2006
Dry Stone Walling Courses 2007
Dates, locations and additional information will be available soon on our new website, where you can also book the courses. If in the meantime you have any questions or want to register for our courses please contact me at les@morgan-young.com.
Monday, September 04, 2006
Walls, walls and more walls!
I was fortunate to be able to sit in on the National Management Meeting of the DSWA on Saturday at the DSWA HQ at Crooklands near Kendal. It was an eye opener to gain an understanding of how much work and how many issues the management committee are dealing with on behalf of the DSWA. There is only one paid official, and the DSWA certainly get their salary’s worth from Alison!
I met some living legends in the dry stone walling world who’s names I have been taught to respect and admire by my teacher and Master Craftsman, Mike Rushton, and other well respected members of the walling community.
After the meeting, Branch Chairman Alan Devonport and myself braved the torrential rain which was bearing in on us horizontally carried by a wicket wind, to view the DSWA exhibition of different traditional styles of British walling. The exhibition is located at the Westmoreland County Showground so if you're going to the annual show on the 15th of September I'd thoroughly recommend that you spend a half hour looking at these beautiful walls. They are fantastic and are a tribute to those craftsmen who built them. Have a look at these photos (I apologise for the quality of the piccies but it was chucking it down and I had to keep wiping the camera lens with and ever more waterlogged hankie!)

I must admit to having a vested interest in this piece of walling as I, through my stone company The Natural Stone Merchants, donated this stone to the DSWA. My hat of to those atht built this section as they've done a grand job!












On Sunday, armed with my new French hammer which I purchased from the DSWA, I went to finish off the cheek end at Richards farm.
My new French hammer. It has a vertical pointy end which is brill for cracking stone along the plane and a concave head which is brilliant for breaking and dressing the stone. A fine purchase!
It was a lovely warm day – a bit windy, but at least it keeps the flies away. It was one of those days where I was not happy with the standards of my walling and I rebuilt several pieces and I still wasn’t happy with those either. The weather turned and after two good soakings I decided to call it a day and go and feed my bees instead. So sorry Richard, its still not done mate but it won’t be long now! Needless to say I’m not publishing a photo of the wall until I’m happy with it!!
Just to prove that Sunday was only fit for ducks, here's Jemima and her new chicks enjoying the downpours at Richards farm!
A final word to my two flowers (who refused to be photographed for this blog!) well done on your excellent A levels and GCSE's. You thoroughly deserve your results with all the hard work which you put in. I'm a very proud Dud.
Sunday, April 30, 2006
There's a mouse on my nuts........

Well, the dry stone walling exams have been and gone and left several budding Wallers disappointed. The day was perfect with some sun and a chilly breeze to keep the entrants cool. The people doing their initial certificate were required to strip down and rebuild a straight forward section of wall of an area of 2.5 metres. This has to be completed in 7 hours. The intermediate entrants were required to strip do

It doesn’t sound like a great deal of work at first sight, but I can assure you that it’s a tough challenge. All the DSWA building specifications have to be met while constructing the wall and sometimes quality can be overlooked when trying to achieve the speed to finish in time.
A combination of a lack of time and not meeting the required skill levels took their toll on the eight

Thank you to the examiners Paul and Sean for giving up their time to help us run the exam day. Much appreciated. Also, a big thank you to our Chairman, Alan Davenport who spent a lot of his time in setting up the exam, organising training days and being there for those who entered for their certification.
In the village of Silkstone Common a terrible disaster occurred on 4th July 1838. A torrential downpour caused havoc to the locality. Crops were flattened and the streams filled up rapidly with floodwater and burst their banks. It was due to the bursting of a steam flowing through Nabs Wood that 26 children aged between 7 and 17 were drowned; pinned against a ventilation door as a huge deluge of water hit them as they tried to escape from Huskar pit in which they were working. Had these poor children done as they were told and stayed at the bottom of the main shaft at nearby Moorend, they would have survived. Their tragic story is very well told in Alan Gallops book ‘Children of the Dark’.
There was widespread condemnation following the disaster, including that of the newly enthroned Queen Victoria, which lead to an enquiry being set up, headed by the future Earl of Shaftsbury. This enquiry into the working conditions of children and women in various industries eventually resulted in the 1842 Factory Reform Act which made it illegal for children and women to work in certain industries. In a cashed strapped mining family this Act was largely ignored for many years.
In Nabs Wood today there is a memorial erected by the local villagers


Well I couldn’t get my breath the other day. I’d been out with the dogs out was enjoying my second cuppa of the day when I spotted this mouse eyeing up my nuts!

By the bard, Rabbie Burns
Wednesday, April 05, 2006
Dry Stone Walls

Building dry stone walls is not only a pleasure but because they stand for hundred of years they become a home for all sorts of animals and fauna which enhance their beauty.

They act as hairdriers for sheep as they cower behind a wall in wet and windy weather; the air passing through the wall dries the sheep.
I wall as a hobby and I intend to place a diary of my walling this summer onto this blog. I am a registered intermediate waller with the Dry Stone Walling Association and an active member of the South Yorkshire branch of the DSWA.

The pictures are of several walls either 'gapped' or built at a farm at Oxspring, South Yorkshire.
More to follow...........
