I had an odd feeling last night. I don’t like to think of myself as the kind of blogger who writes a lot about his feelings, but…
I guess I am.
Anyway, I was working on my Viking tent awning. I put together this non-historically-authentic, purely functional tent-awning thing to keep the sun off me when we’re doing encampments. I got the pattern off the internet. It’s a simple project, being built on a 9×12 painter’s drop cloth.
My first awning didn’t last long. I was pretty sure from the start that the fabric wouldn’t hold up to any kind of wind. It was thin stuff, like a 600-page novel written in six months. I wanted to reinforce the grommet locations, but I didn’t have any spare canvas. So I figured I’d make the first awning, then use it to patch the second once it had failed.
I’m not kidding you here. That’s how my brain works.
The fabric failed down in Bode, Iowa, and one of my vacation projects this week has been to whip up a new one. I bought the heaviest drop cloth I could find, and I used patches made from the old awning to reinforce the grommet locations, just as planned.
All that set-up exposition was provided to explain how I came to be watching “Criminal Minds” on TV last night, sewing away at a big piece of canvas with a large needle and heavy thread.
It came to me, all of a sudden, that this activity felt comfortable, familiar.
But I’ve never done it before in my life. Not on a big piece of cloth like the awning.
Then it occurred to me that I’m descended from hundreds of generations of Norwegian fishermen who spent a lot of time mending sails.
Genetic memory? (Possible.)
Incipient psychosis? (More likely.)
In any case, it was a strange enough feeling to blog about on a quiet, rainy August day.