A freshly thatched roof, in Norfolk.
I have loved working here, using local and natural materials to revitalise a delightful cottage.
The cottage is clay lump, the roof is reed and straw. All low tech, all effective, all beautiful.
It is the time when reedcutters are getting cut reed from the marshes, and thatchers are collecting it for use over the coming months.
This reed is from Cley, in North Norfolk, and I've brought it down to the south of the county, ready to go on a roof just five minutes from home.
It isn't thatching related, but it does have some history stuff, and I know some of you find such things mildly interesting.
Basically, it's just me waffling on about stones.
I spent part of last year working on this church.
The largest roof I've thatched, and I think one of my favourites.
It's stood for 600 years and still forms the heart of the community. I met many different people while there, and the church meant something to each of them.
My talented friend, filmmaker @HannantMark has made a gorgeous film titled Layers Of Reed
It's been shown at @liftoffnetwork film festival, and has a beautiful soundtrack by The Feathered Thorns.
It does contain two dodgy lead characters though, which you'll have to endure
I went to look at a thatched roof in a remote hamlet on the edge of the marshes, and visited the nearby church at the same time.
England's churches have been called the greatest folk museums in the world, and you can see why here...
This is the face of a thatcher who is just finishing a the biggest roof he has thatched, during the wettest autumn he has worked through.
Relived, tired, dirty and proud.
Photo by @sibuckphoto
youtu.be/djoxItoxCkg?feature…
If you are based in the US or Canada and have an interest in the handmade, the traditional and the crafted.....check out this on PBS, airing on Fri 24th Nov.
And yes, it does also have me in it.
I love old buildings, which is a good thing as I spend my days working on them.
This is Westhall Church, deep in the Suffolk countryside.
With sections dating from 1120, and multiple layers of history added every century, this place is a palimpsest of styles and designs.
As a thatcher, I worked alone for 5 years when I first set up.
For the last 8 years, Olly has been with me. He has learnt the craft and become a great thatcher in his own right.
If you can find a job you enjoy, shared with company you like, then work never feels like work.
Stripping old thatch from the church roof today.
70 summers of heat and dust, 70 winters of rain and grime, all ingrained in my skin.
I could have found a safe desk job, away from muck and grime, sun and rain.
I'd have hated every minute.
@sibuckphoto captures it all superbly.
A hot spell, and while work on the roof has been ongoing, today was a pleasant change, for I headed to my local river, the Waveney.
I spent the day waist deep in cool waters, gathering bulrushes with @RiverWaveney. These will be woven into furniture seats by @par_avion_co
I love this shot by the masterful @sibuckphoto for it captures the dynamism of thatching.
The reed is thrown from ground to scaffold, then carried up to working level.
After many years, one's balance is sure enough to walk up the ladder hands-free so bundles can be carried up.