-
13th June 09, 11:50 AM
#11
South Athletic Field, part I
The South Athletic Field was right behind the audience for the Highland dancing, and the weight toss was going on the whole time.
-
-
13th June 09, 12:31 PM
#12
Vendors, part II
The NTCPD practicing near their booth.
Electric blue Campbell of Argyll. This booth was roughly in the same place as the Frugal Corner's booth last year, and selling the same kilts. However it was not the Frugal Corner, as the seller told me. He said he thought the Frugal Corner had a booth somewhere else, however. Unfortunately, most of the vendor booths were unmarked—at least, those that were selling cheap kilts.
Blimey, it's Bright Skye!
Wrong Angus and wrong Caledonia. I prefer the Caledonia (New) in modern colors. As for the Angus, I have settled on one particular tartan as "my" tartan: Angus Muted, woven by the House of Edgar in 13 oz. wool (MW501). If I had seen a tie in that tartan, I would have snapped it up immediately. Because this was Ingles Buchan's Angus Ancient, I decided to give it a pass. I guess I'm just picky.
Private lessons from a fencing master, only $3.00.
Not Wolfhawk. I believe I saw this fellow last year as well. I saw three or four people wearing Texas Bluebonnet kilts this year, about the same as last year.
What a difference a year makes. Last year all the Gold Brothers "Black Watch" kilts I saw were in some other tartan that only vaguely resembled the Black Watch to my eyes. This year I saw no evidence of that tartan anywhere, and only this thoroughly conventional rendition of the Black Watch. I call that an improvement.
-
-
13th June 09, 12:53 PM
#13
Scotland Forever
I didn't expect to see a booth for the Celtic Craft Centre this year, but Geoffrey (Tailor) was also absent. That left Scotland Forever as the sole vendor of wool kilts with a booth this year, except possibly for the vendor selling the Ingles Buchan ties, who also had some swatch books.
Roxburgh Red and Texas Bluebonnet. I couldn't find any tags with sizing information on them. When I came by later the Roxburgh Red was gone, presumably sold.
Texas Bluebonnet ties and one Welsh National. I belatedly came to the conclusion that the Welsh National tie might have made a good purchase.
The NTCPD arrived on the mezzanine while I was at the Scotland Forever booth.
-
-
13th June 09, 12:55 PM
#14
Looks like you had a full, exciting day!
-
-
13th June 09, 01:01 PM
#15
Great set of pics... I feel like I was there!
-
-
13th June 09, 01:02 PM
#16
Highland Dancing, part II
When I came back to the Dance Tent they were doing the sword dance.
The piper and the judge.
The youngest competitor, and she didn't even need a piper. I'm not sure she had the judge's full attention, though.
The last round of dances.
-
-
13th June 09, 01:08 PM
#17
South Athletic Field, part II
At the same time as the dancing from my last post was going on, the weight toss was still going on behind me. So I kept turning around to snap pictures of the weight toss, especially between dances.
The battery in my camera lasted me until about the end of the Highland dancing and then gave out. But I'm not quite finished yet....
-
-
13th June 09, 02:48 PM
#18
XMarkers, Pipe Bands & Scottish Country Dancing
As I left the Dance Tent area, I overheard some people in a discussion about when they could hear some piping. I confidently informed them that the solo piping competition would be at 5:30 in the Dance Tent. After all, that's what it said in the program I paid one dollar for.
Afterwards I had some dinner. No Scotch eggs this time. I had a Scottish meat pie and a meat pie from two different vendors. That was enough to stave off hunger. Then I decided to wander around looking for XMarkers. I saw one Matheson tartan, but I was fairly certain it wasn't McMathTX, as he was wearing cream hose, not black. After several false alarms I eventually found Wolfhawk, who was wearing a Texas Bluebonnet kilt. He seemed to be on his way out, but he told me about where he had seen several other XMarkers. The names that stuck in my mind were Stewart and Mackenzie. I didn't see any Mackenzie tents around, but I did pay a visit to the Stewart tent. I asked about X Marks the Scot, but none of the Stewarts seemed to know anything about it. One of them said that maybe the person I had been referred to was the fellow in charge of the tent, who was not there at the time, and for whom they were waiting. I hung out at the Stewart tent for a while, but eventually I decided to leave and take a peek at the open piping competition.
When I got to the Dance Tent it was completely empty. Or rather, there were actually people seated there watching the weight toss, which was still going on. I wandered around and was passing the Rahr & Sons booth when I noticed a fellow wearing a short-sleeve button-down shirt with World War I aircraft on it. At the same time he noticed the Force Unleashed t-shirt I was wearing. We got to talking, and I asked him if he knew when the solo competition would be. He didn't, but he got the attention of his friend, who was a piper. His friend informed me that the solo competion was already over. It had taken place in the southwest corner of the stadium complex, and probably ended well before the Highland dancing did. So much for the accuracy of my program schedule.
The piper friend asked if I was a piper, and I told him no; I had just wanted to watch the competition. Then he asked me if I was drummer. Guess where he was going with this?
So I got invited to join the Fort Worth Scottish Pipes & Drums. I'm going to their practice next Thursday to check them out.
Apart from the two fellows I just mentioned, I also noticed that the judge of last year's (and this year's) open piping competition was there at the Rahr & Sons booth wearing his Ogilvie kilt. I talked to him briefly last year, but I'm not sure if he remembered me from then. I followed the three of them to the Glencoe tent, where Bob Richardson (the piping judge) met up with Alex Beaton (wearing a MacLeod of Harris Ancient kilt) and another fellow (wearing a Stevenson kilt). Apparently these three were schoolmates in Scotland.
At some point Bob Richardson offered me a dram. If I recall correctly, that's the first time anyone has offered me alcohol. I declined, telling him I was a teetotaler. Still, I thought it was pretty cool.
By the time I got back to the Stewart tent, all the Stewarts who had been there before were gone. In their place was a couple. The husband was wearing the Stewart of Appin tartan, but I mistook it for the Grant tartan at first sight, and when I entered the tent I said something like "So, have the Stewarts all left?". The man in the Stewart of Appin kilt was, of course, kscaddo. While I was hanging out at the Stewart tent for the second time, medic78 showed up wearing a Smith Ancient Sport Kilt. So now I've met five XMarkers in person.
After that, I couldn't think of anything much I had left to do, so I decided to head out. First, however, I stopped by Scotland Forever to take another gander at their swatch books. The member of the Fort Worth Scottish who I had talked to told me their tartan was the Inverness Modern. I had no idea what it looked like, so for that reason I was perusing Scotland Forever's swatch books. When I found Lochcarron's Inverness sample, I realized it was the same tartan I had earlier mistaken for the Sinclair. The House of Edgar's Inverness sample looked totally different, with thick yellow stripes.
I realized that Scottish country dancing was now going on at the dance tent, so I decided to stay a little while longer to watch. On my way there I passed a fellow wearing a Mackenzie kilt pleated to the white stripe. I noticed it because the vast majority of kilts I had seen that day were pleated to the sett. I later discovered that the fellow I passed might have been attworth.
I arrived at the Dance Tent and found that my camera had recovered enough to take a couple of pictures. This is the better of the two:
I hung around a little while, but when they started collecting members of the audience to go up on stage I decided to make my getaway.
I noticed that the vendor selling the Ingles Buchan ties also had swatch books—from Marton Mills as well as the Big Three—, so I hung around looking at swatch books for a while longer. Then, finally, I left.
The thing that struck me, overall, is how many individual people I actually recognized from last year, although I suppose it shouldn't surprise me.
-
-
13th June 09, 03:37 PM
#19
Sounds like you had a good day. Thanks for posting the photos.
[I][B]Nearly all men can stand adversity. If you really want to test a man’s character,
Give him power.[/B][/I] - [I]Abraham Lincoln[/I]
-
-
13th June 09, 03:40 PM
#20
Originally Posted by Morris of Heathfield
Roxburgh Red and Texas Bluebonnet. I couldn't find any tags with sizing information on them. When I came by later the Roxburgh Red was gone, presumably sold.
aw crud! someone else bought it and was not me, probably another Young living in the area....
do we have a website or name for the vendor?
-
Similar Threads
-
By Brewboy in forum Illinois
Replies: 2
Last Post: 31st May 09, 04:35 AM
-
By Rogerson785 in forum Show us your pics
Replies: 3
Last Post: 30th September 08, 02:03 AM
-
By Morris at Heathfield in forum Show us your pics
Replies: 43
Last Post: 21st June 08, 07:35 PM
-
By RowdyRed in forum General Kilt Talk
Replies: 0
Last Post: 4th June 07, 02:34 PM
-
By MACKAY in forum Highland Games and Celtic Event Discussion
Replies: 0
Last Post: 31st May 05, 06:12 AM
Tags for this Thread
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks