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Thread: Walking canes

  1. #1
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    Walking canes

    What is the traditional historical information regarding the tall walking cane I see in many drawings?

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    I'm no Scotland expert but I would suspect it's a remnant of either shepherding, walking in the highlands - or both.
    Steve
    Clans MacDonald & MacKay
    In the Highlands of Colorado.

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    It's called a cromach, and it is a variation of the shepherd's crook. Classically the "crook" is made of horn, and just large enough to slip round a sheep's neck. The end of the hook has an upturn (sometimes carved to look like a thistle) and this creates a small hook. During lambing, the staff can be plunged into the ground at night and a lantern hung from the small hook, leaving the shepherd with both hands free to assist with the delivery of the lamb.

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    Twa_Corbies is offline Membership Revoked for repeated rule violations.
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    Here are a few photos showing a typical range of styles of the cromach or Highland shepherd's cruik:










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    I've read someplace that some Cromache makers bend living saplings or branches and after enough time has passed then they harvest the ready made Cromache. The pictures give me some idea's though.

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    Here is my Crommach since finding it, it has fast become my favourite, though for more dressy events I like my Victorian Doorknob handled walking stick.

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    I've been cutting several walking sticks from my trees this year. There is one tall one so far, and it is cut at the fork of a branch for the top end.

    I put wax on the cut ends, and it can take a long time for the wood to dry down. I might start carving on them in a year or more.
    I tried to ask my inner curmudgeon before posting, but he sprayed me with the garden hose…
    Yes, I have squirrels in my brain…

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    Twa_Corbies is offline Membership Revoked for repeated rule violations.
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    Quote Originally Posted by wyldathart View Post
    I've read someplace that some Cromache makers bend living saplings or branches and after enough time has passed then they harvest the ready made Cromache. The pictures give me some idea's though.
    Usually cromachs are made with the head shaped from a ram's horn, which requires boiling the horn and some other techniques unknown to me; but there are cromach's that are made entirely from wood, and I believe that these are often made by digging up a portion of the root and carving it into the head of the stick. There are also very simple ones made by bending the branch using heat and steam. Stick carving is an artform unto itself, and there are competitions in stick-making throughout the U.K.

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    ....interesting that there is such a liking to have that "stick" in hand as one walks a trail or across a field. I have a solid rosewood walking stick that I made several years ago. Perhaps I'll take it to Scotland with me just to give it some field work there.

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    The best book on the subject is "Walking & Working Sticks" by the late Theo Fossel, who was the founding chairman of the British Stickmakers Guild. ISBN 1 869988 00 0 - hardback and 1 869988 01 9 - paperback. It really is a stickmaker's bible and for that reason, I believe is still in print.

    I once attended one of his weekend "Schools" and produced a stick at the end of it - 'a poor thing, but mine own'. It is not much to look at but I have used it this last 20 years.

    Regards

    Chas

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