9 October 03

Full Moon over Walnuts

Numenius and I wandered out this evening to look at the moon. It may not seem like much, but it’s the first time I’ve been able to match his strides in this way since August 10th. The boot is still on but every day I get stronger. I am even walking with a shoe on my left foot at the PT’s, doing certain exercises with it.

The moon and the walnuts remind me it’s time once again to get busy making walnut ink. Since this involves simmering a huge pot on the stove for three days, the weather needs to cooperate. I was thinking this year of expanding my repertoire and trying to make oak gall ink; the valley oaks seem to have been hard hit in the last few years and the galls are lying about on the ground, ready for something. Sybill Archibald suggests that in medieval times the symbolism of the wasp-evil inversion of the bee, attribute of the Virgin Mary-meant that oak galls were a bridge between good and evil, and that the process of writing with ink prepared from oak galls was spiritual. I’m interested to try it, though I have no idea where I’m going to find ferrous sulphate.

Posted by at 06:19 PM in Nature and Place | Link |
  1. Iron pills, dear heart. No, not for your heart—for your ink. Go to the drugstore, look under “iron” and get the one that’s purest iron sulphate. At least, I think that’s right.

    And I like the oak-gall ink. Gall and wormwood: what some of us dine on, these days.

    Doc Rock    10. October 2003, 13:00    Link
  2. Sounds really interesting. Is it used only as a dye or for writing / drawing? And what colour does it come out?

    Coup de Vent    10. October 2003, 14:14    Link
  3. Please do make some, Pica. I’ve been thinking about it as I ‘ve seen nuts on the ground and read about Fred’s bumper crop. Here, the crop that’s a wasting are wild grapes – I need to get a big basket and pick enough for a batch of jam. Did you ever make pokeweed ink? I saw a huge gorgeous plant in Cooperstown – Jonathan saw it and exclaimed “What is THAT??” My fingers used to be magenta every fall.

    beth    11. October 2003, 12:50    Link

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