Monday, March 30, 2026
Cope Aesthetic
Friday, March 27, 2026
Driveby Compliments
When I was just finishing up this new dry stone wall entrance gate we built last year, I was delighted to be approached by a lovely young lady, who had pulled up behind my truck and began to eagerly tell me how wonderful the wall looked .
I commended her on her good taste and began to tell her some of the more interesting aspects of the project. I then asked if she might like to see the wall from the estate side too? She thanked me and said " I would, but actually, I’m the gardener here, and I need to get by your truck!"
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Balancing the Kapla-Sphere.
Maybe it will become a trend and go viral, reaching thousands of new followers. Ha.
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Our Stoney Shelter
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Connecting the stones
Breaching at an angle towards the hedgerow, this VW bug size specimen , this iceberg of a boulder , with its exposed surface , scarred with years of having been battered by farm implements being dragged over it, is waiting . Just waiting
Most farmers hate stones. And the stones? I suspect they don’t hate farmers. Maybe they even forgive all the smashing and crunching and burying , and waiting.
Big boulders that are mostly hidden beneath the surface are difficult to remove . This boulder, would like to join its friends, the ones in the hedge row over there . This fellow has been many years out in the field waiting to be relocated . Would he be lonely? Stones seem to like to be together.
Farmers do their part. For years and years, stones from the fields are all collected and stacked at the perimeters. The long stony strands along the fence lines are creating a kind of gossamer (albeit hefty) interdependent network of fauna and fieldstone. Not unlike mushrooms. Fields, continue to be cleared from stones, but become more and more surrounded by them. Eventually the fields form a kind of cellular pattern that can be seen from the sky. The stones are connecting the lots. The landscape is bubblingly alive .
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Dry Stone Waterfall
Back in June of 2016 we sent a grant proposal to the Canada Council detailing a unique land installation in Fenelon Falls on an island in the Trent-Severn Waterway. The project was initiated by a handful of enthusiastic townspeople who were actively involved in finding a solution, that would not just deal with the deteriorating cliff face on the south side of the island, but also be an aesthetic stone wall structure that the public could enjoy seeing, rather than having it continue to be a fenced off ‘area.
From the bridge the cliff face needing 'shoring up can be partially seen between the trees.
A possible rock face repair, merely shoring up the steep hill with armour stone, was one possible idea but the individuals involved in town planning looked to find a better solution. The dry stone design that I proposed , along with several renderings of what it would look like, was accepted by everyone involved, including a representative of the Trent Canal authority and so began plans to finance the project
A formal request for a Canada Council grant was drafted and submitted, specifying a budget that was not excessive, and presented a thorough description of the work involved in not only structurally rebuilding the crumbling section of the island but also implementing an artistic ‘waterfall’ stone installation into the design.
I had a lot of help with the wording of the grant document, for which I was very thankful. It included the bios of several skilled dry stone wallers who would be working on the project with me, and a detailing of the proposed two-month schedule for completion of the project .
Unfortunately we did not get the grant.
I include here some of the first renderings of what is essentially a conceptual art project, which also included the structural remediating of a low terraced outcropping. The idea was to use natural stone to look like a naturally occurring terraces of exposed rock face, through which, or over which, a small dry river creek, or ‘geological vein’ of different material would, by having stones fitted at right angles to the rest of the terraced stonework, give the suggestion of cascading water. To give a further appearance of water going over the terraces , boulders woulf be tastefully placed to look as natural as possible.










