Honeysuckle, Strangled Wood, and Spirally Walking Sticks

in woodwork •  7 years ago  (edited)

Let's start with a nice photo of wild honeysuckle I made:

What does this have to do with walking sticks?

Bear with me.

Honeysuckle is a climber; it spirals its way up using the support of just about anything it can find:

When it gets older, the vines harden and become less flexible:

It will still hold on tight, and the young tree it is on will grow, and be "strangled" by the vines. This explains honeysuckle's other name, which is woodbine:

Eventually, the tree will look like this:

There is a very old tradition in my region of The Netherlands of making walking sticks out of this deformed wood. In the local dialect these are called goastok:

They were relatively rare because of the small chance of finding a suitable piece of wood. Owning one was a sign of distinction and tradition, and they were mainly used on special occasions.

I am determined to make one myself some day, as soon as I find a nicely strangled tree.

No, I didn't have to wait years between making these photos; I found these stages of strangulation all on the same day. Unfortunately, the best one wasn't thick and strong enough yet to use.

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wow..amazing...capture..

Great post @ocrdu. If you found all three of those on the same day then surely there must be a suitable tree lying around somewhere.

Presumably you have to wait for them to die do you?

Does the strangulation kill them?

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

No, not usually, but it does happen.

Ideally, you get the wood when it is alive and then let it dry; it is often too far gone when it has been lying on the forest floor (and there wasn't anyway).

This is why I like storms and pruning going on in big parks; I can get the wood without feeling guilty.

If I ever find a suitable young tree for a goastok, however, it is going down 8-).

Well I hope you find one soon @ocrdu although it might be a bit tricky to sand where the honeysuckle meets the tree. 😊

Fortunately, I'm a tricky and patient sander.

It has lots of meaningful and function, God creates all, thankyou for sharing

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Amazing plant and the walking sticks look excellent! The flower in the first photo is beautiful with lovely color. Great shot! ;)

Thank you! It's a beautiful flower, that helped 8-).

You're welcome! And that's because you took great photos, too! ;)

wow amazing