Re: [lace-chat] Deer: was: A Little Canadian Humor

2009-03-01 Thread Joy Beeson
On 2/27/09 8:19 AM, Clay Blackwell wrote: . . . and the deer seem to be smart enough to know that they're free to wander about un-molested in the city. The City of Warsaw organizes a herd-reduction every year, using volunteer bow hunters. (I don't know why they volunteer when it means

Re: [lace-chat] Honiton

2009-03-01 Thread Brenda Paternoster
If you are winding bobbins from scratch there is no need to have a knot, but the nature of Honiton lace is that bobbins are frequently bowed off (taken out) and re-used in another part of the lace. When a pair is bowed off using blunt scissors the threads on that pair will be knotted

Re: [lace-chat] Deer: was: A Little Canadian Humor

2009-03-01 Thread Dmt11home
I would think it would be hard enough to kill a deer with a bow at all, let alone to kill them in any particular order. How do they keep from impaling children and old people in an urban hunting zone? Devon In a message dated 3/1/2009 2:02:00 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,

[lace-chat] Re: Deer: was: A Little Canadian Humor

2009-03-01 Thread Tamara P Duvall
On Mar 1, 2009, at 16:12, dmt11h...@aol.com (Devon) wrote: I would think it would be hard enough to kill a deer with a bow at all, Hey, that's how all deer was hunted in the days of interest (when lace was still a novelty). And, like everything else, practice makes perfect :) Bow hunting