Tag: rustic-brooms

  • Time Travel — Our Brooms Pay Visit to the Good Ol’ Days!

    Blog post from May 2022

    There is a gold rush ghost town not far from our shop named Molson, tucked snuggly against the Canada border in the northern most region of the Okanogan Highlands.  Founded in 1900, the old townsite is still in pretty good shape, with well preserved buildings, mining & farm equipment, and some of the original boardwalks.  The whole scene can really make your mind wander.  What it must have been like homesteading this harsh place back in the day? 

    I’ve often wondered how our brooms would look if we brought them to Molson.  Maybe try them out on the boardwalks or the floors of the old bank.  See what they look like leaning next to a doorway.  Molson’s peak, and the climax of the American broomcorn industry happened at about the same time in history, so it seemed to make sense to me…

    Winter is nearly here, and snow is forecast.  So if taking our brooms back in time is gonna happen this year, we better load them up and hit the road.  We took a few with us.  Some woven ones, and of course our own Shaker Authentic broom off the front porch.  We need a day out.  This would be fun.

    On the way through the Highlands, we listened to Colter Wall folk albums -Songs of the Plains, and Western Swings and Waltzes.  Really put us in the right mood to visit the Old West. 

    Arriving at the old town site, we were impressed how cold it was.  This is mid-November, and the wind will cut you half in two.  Some of the antique farming impliments were froze to the ground.  The buildings are still open to escape the wind, but bring long johns!

    We would have to work fast.  My hands were so cold.  First stop was the front porch of the Walker & Odell Cabin.  The woven lodgepole pine broom seemed to fit right in.  I was surprised that the placement of a household item could seem to bring an old ghost town to life!

    Then to the coolest building of all… Molson State Bank.  First on the porch, then leaning next to a cup of coffee at the teller’s booth.  Just like the janitor was sweeping and having a coffee break at the same time.

    Inside the bank…

    The whole town could have used a good sweeping.  I guess ghost towns are always a bit dusty.  Even outhouses need some broom love now and then.

    We didn’t stay long because of the cold, but it felt good to go back in time for just a spell.  It was nice to finally connect our creations to their own era. 

    Our brooms got to do a little sweeping on the old boardwalks, and blend in casually against the walls of the Molson ghost town.  For a minute there, it felt like we’d really stepped back a few years.  I dreamed up the faint smell of cornbread coming from one of the homestead kitchens.  I even thought I heard boots on the wood floors and some chickens running around.  Ghost towns can confuse a person that way.

     At least I know the brooms are real…  

     www.americanbroomshop.com 

  • Goodbye Winter — We’re Sad to See You Go

    Blog post from May 22, 2022

    Winter was long again this year, but I have to say it was full of surprise, and numerous challenges. In the north woods, winter is pretty much a year ’round concern. Around here, they say there are two seasons: winter, and getting ready for winter.

    Our shop is heated by wood stove, so we buck a lot of logs in the summer. It’s a team effort. I’m the chain saw man, and Sarah rolls the rounds into the truck. We take a drive into the mountains looking for downed fir or tamarack, which are known for putting out the most heat. We bring a picnic basket, and do our best to make a plain chore into a nice, scenic outting. Before we get started, give me a few minutes to fix the chainsaw…

    It takes about 3 cords of firewood to get us through winter. We heat the cabin with 5, so all-told we do a lot of splitting and stacking. Spring is the best time. The weather is cool, and it’s good to get out. Hot summer weather is for cooking the wood dry — while we sip lemonaide.

    Wood heat is the best way to dry brooms in our shop.  We soak the broom corn to make it pliable for bending and weaving.  A wood fire dries them quick, so we can get them packaged and shipped.  When we’re not busy building brooms or pouring candles, it’s likely we are splitting kindling or stoking the fires.  It’s a style of living that has a lot of rewards, if you can ignore a little pain and sweat.  They say nothing warms your bones quite like a wood fire!

    Wood heat is the best way to dry brooms in our shop.  We soak the broom corn to make it pliable for bending and weaving.  A wood fire dries them quick, so we can get them packaged and shipped.  When we’re not busy building brooms or pouring candles, it’s likely we are splitting kindling or stoking the fires.  It’s a style of living that has a lot of rewards, if you can ignore a little pain and sweat.  They say nothing warms your bones quite like a wood fire!

    The cold of winter aint so bad, really.  There are always a lot of surprises.  Deer come to feed outside our shop windows during the day, keeping us company.  Our yellow dog, Tig, is always entertaining.  Coyotes sneak through.  And once in a while we get a glimse of the snowshoe hare that lives in the thicket by the shop.

    It is a little sad to say goodbye to winter — but we’re always excited for the changes.  Spring means working outside again, making brooms out on the shop porch.  The birds are here, singing their songs.  We’ll plant the garden and do some spring cleaning.  Then — when the mood is right — I’ll try to fire up the old chainsaw, and see if it runs.  Maybe we’ll load the tools, and try to find an easy wood log along side a skid trail up on the mountain.  No rush.  We have plenty of time to get ready…     

    http://www.americanbroomshop.com