jj

javawizard

23/09/2007 11:01 AM

An Interesting Historical Story About Woodworking

It was once the custom in Wales that young men's hands should be kept
busy when they came courting. Therefore, they were required to carve
spoons for their young ladies' parents. Some of the wooden spoons were
very ornate with birds carved into the handles and links of wooden
chain extending from the end of the handles. - from the World History
section of www.odd-info.com


This topic has 7 replies

Rd

Robatoy

in reply to javawizard on 23/09/2007 11:01 AM

23/09/2007 5:08 PM

On Sep 23, 3:35 pm, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
> Sun, Sep 23, 2007, 11:01am (EDT-3) [email protected] (javawizard) doth
> sayeth:
> It was once the custom in Wales that young men's hands should be kept
> busy when they came courting. Therefore, they were required to carve
> spoons for their young ladies' parents. Some of the wooden spoons were
> very ornate with birds carved into the handles and links of wooden chain
> extending from the end of the handles. - from the World History section
> ofwww.odd-info.com
>
> And does it say how many came prepaed with an already carved spoon,
> and carving chips, concealed in a jacket pocket?
>

I LIKE the way you think, JT.

JJ

in reply to javawizard on 23/09/2007 11:01 AM

23/09/2007 3:35 PM

Sun, Sep 23, 2007, 11:01am (EDT-3) [email protected] (javawizard) doth
sayeth:
It was once the custom in Wales that young men's hands should be kept
busy when they came courting. Therefore, they were required to carve
spoons for their young ladies' parents. Some of the wooden spoons were
very ornate with birds carved into the handles and links of wooden chain
extending from the end of the handles. - from the World History section
of www.odd-info.com

And does it say how many came prepaed with an already carved spoon,
and carving chips, concealed in a jacket pocket?



JOAT
What is life without challenge and a constant stream of new
humiliations?
- Peter Egan

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to javawizard on 23/09/2007 11:01 AM

26/09/2007 12:59 AM

On Sun, 23 Sep 2007 15:35:42 -0400, [email protected] (J T)
wrote:

>It was once the custom in Wales that young men's hands should be kept
>busy when they came courting. Therefore, they were required to carve
>spoons for their young ladies' parents.

> And does it say how many came prepaed with an already carved spoon,
>and carving chips, concealed in a jacket pocket?

They all did. A good spoon is a significant amount of work - prospective
suitors were judged on the basis of their offerings. Welsh love spoons
are serious pieces of carving, with many technical flourishes such as
caged balls or chain links. Carving one isn't an overnight task. They
were also given to the girl, not her parents.

I've never heard this "keeping the hands busy" malarkey. None of my
spoon books, nor my spooning books, make any mention of this bogus
claim.

There's also the issue that Wales practised "bundling" as a form of
courtship [1], something that's known in America (and Tim Burton's film
"Sleepy Hollow) but are in England. There's little point in carving
spoons whilst both being bundled into a sewn-up sack, you'd get shavings
everywhere...

[1] A History of Courting, E. S. Turner, 1954

--
'Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu Evesham wagn'nagl fhtagn'

BM

"Buddy Matlosz"

in reply to javawizard on 23/09/2007 11:01 AM

23/09/2007 7:55 PM

I never had any problem keeping MY hands busy.

B.

"javawizard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> It was once the custom in Wales that young men's hands should be kept
> busy when they came courting. Therefore, they were required to carve
> spoons for their young ladies' parents. Some of the wooden spoons were
> very ornate with birds carved into the handles and links of wooden
> chain extending from the end of the handles. - from the World History
> section of www.odd-info.com
>

WW

"Warren Weber"

in reply to javawizard on 23/09/2007 11:01 AM

24/09/2007 2:48 PM


"J T" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Sun, Sep 23, 2007, 11:01am (EDT-3) [email protected] (javawizard) doth
> sayeth:
> It was once the custom in Wales that young men's hands should be kept
> busy when they came courting. Therefore, they were required to carve
> spoons for their young ladies' parents. Some of the wooden spoons were
> very ornate with birds carved into the handles and links of wooden chain
> extending from the end of the handles. - from the World History section
> of www.odd-info.com
>
> And does it say how many came prepaed with an already carved spoon,
> and carving chips, concealed in a jacket pocket?
>
>
>
> JOAT
> What is life without challenge and a constant stream of new
> humiliations?
> - Peter Egan
>
Fast thinking JT.

md

mac davis

in reply to javawizard on 23/09/2007 11:01 AM

24/09/2007 7:16 AM

On Sun, 23 Sep 2007 17:08:42 -0700, Robatoy <[email protected]> wrote:

>On Sep 23, 3:35 pm, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
>> Sun, Sep 23, 2007, 11:01am (EDT-3) [email protected] (javawizard) doth
>> sayeth:
>> It was once the custom in Wales that young men's hands should be kept
>> busy when they came courting. Therefore, they were required to carve
>> spoons for their young ladies' parents. Some of the wooden spoons were
>> very ornate with birds carved into the handles and links of wooden chain
>> extending from the end of the handles. - from the World History section
>> ofwww.odd-info.com
>>
>> And does it say how many came prepaed with an already carved spoon,
>> and carving chips, concealed in a jacket pocket?
>>
>
>I LIKE the way you think, JT.
>
Me, too...
A dirty mind is a terrible thing to waste..


mac

Please remove splinters before emailing

JJ

in reply to mac davis on 24/09/2007 7:16 AM

24/09/2007 12:32 PM

Mon, Sep 24, 2007, 7:16am (EDT-3) [email protected]
(mac=A0davis) doth sayeth:
Me, too...
A dirty mind is a terrible thing to waste..

Clean mind, clean body - you make your choice.



JOAT
What is life without challenge and a constant stream of new
humiliations?
- Peter Egan


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