We’ve
learned so much while out cruising. I don’t just mean the things you’d expect
to learn: offshore sailing, local history, how to say ‘where’s the bathroom’ in
smattering of foreign languages or even how to husk a coconut. No, we’ve
learned all sorts of cool things we never even knew were out there to learn:
how to custom dye fabric, how to set up a slack line, why that weird looking
fish is doing what it’s doing…
Cruisers
have some of the most diverse skills and backgrounds of any group of people we’ve
ever met. We’ve met botanists and biologists, astronomers, engineers and IT
guys, doctors, lawyers and investment bankers, jewellery makers and stunt
drivers, and the guy who invented the forth squeeze for orange juice.
And from so
many of them we’ve learned things. Real things. Useful things—like which leaf
makes a poultice that can help heal wounds, and how to find constellations in
the new-to-us southern sky and how to take that huge coin collection and turn
it into beautiful keepsakes.
Lauren girl
from Pico was our jewellery maker in the Pacific. Lauren’s grandmother taught
her to make gorgeous embroidered bead jewellery, and she passed on her skills
and knowledge to Amanda from Britannia, who also makes stunning embroidered bead
jewellery, and Amanda kindly passed on some of her skills and knowledge to Maia,
who aspires to make wonderful embroidered bead jewellery.
Amanda and Lauren's work as inspiration |
Maia is
actually doing really well with her new found skills. Her first piece caught
the eye of the kids on Viatrix (a lovely French Canadian family we’ve been
spending time with) and they asked to learn so she invited them and the girls from Dorénavant (another lovely
French Canadian family we’re spending time with—in fact there are currently six
Canadian boats here in Brissie, the most we’ve encountered in one harbour since
Mexico) over for a jewelry making class.
The
class was both a French lesson (Maia can now swear and threaten to eat small
children) and a jewelry making class. And as the kids sewed and giggled and
Maia struggled with the ‘r’ sound in Merde! while the other kids tried to keep
their beads even, I thought about how far this lesson had traveled: from Lauren’s
grandmother to her, and then across oceans and cultures. And soon it will
spread even further.
You have reaffirmed my faith in the next generation with this post. Thank you very much.
ReplyDeleteI loved reading your story. It makes me want to go do something crafty. As in handicraft--not mischief. :)
ReplyDelete