I painted one as a ladybug for each of my sisters and brothers families and one for ours and my parents. I put the date and family vacation on the bottom. They loved tehm, and it made a nice paperweight sized momento.<<<
That is exactly what I was talking about, enhance the natural features and bring out the thought.
I can spend hours with a template and rock slabs, looking for the best ‘design/photo’ that is in the rock, so it can be cut and polished.
Lapidary work is fun and it excites me to find the beauty in the rocks.
When I had my shop, I sold the art work of a young lady, who could take the ugliest flat common desert rock and with a few strokes of her brush, paint a desert scene on them.
The smallest ones, she painted birds and desert flowers on and those I set in the findings for jewelry....think I still have one of her bird rock necklaces.
Yahoo has rock painting groups, or did about 10 years ago, I ran across them and joined about 10 years ago, just to read the fun things they were doing.
You have lots of lost treasure stories in your area.
If I remember rightly, Georgia has gold mines.
Shells are almost a lovely as rocks, I collected those for years, still would if I found one.
Prospecting is something that gets into your blood, you will more than likely never find enough to pay your expenses, as the money in mining comes from investors in your dream or scam and not the minerals.
For me, it was healthy, a reason to walk miles, look and see the country.......and talk to God, for he has always kept me safe.
He did not let me get bit by the many rattlesnakes that I so foolishly over looked, once two at eye level, on a rock wall, of course I was looking down and had to have been only inches from them.
He shared so many of his creations with me, that I still do not understand how he did it all.
Yes, it is fun to write about that which you love to do, and for me, to dig out the unknown facts and be able to write about them was the fun part.
A hundred years ago, there was a mail route here that they could not keep going, it went 125 miles to the mining camps on the Bill Williams river, almost to Wickenberg.....
The reason that it was always running late, is that the mail carriers kept going insane.
I went down and camped there several times, considered moving to the area and am sorry that I did not, as few people live there, there is no work.
I took real estate clients with me one time, they took their dogs and all went well, until, as we sat around the camp fire, all of a sudden Joyce said “They didn’t, tell me they didn’t!!!”.
I did not have a clue as to what she was talking about, but soon found out.
Their dogs were ‘working dogs’, from their recently sold horse ranch at Tucson.
The dogs went out, rounded up all the wild horses and wild burros and brought them to camp.
A stampede of them, it was dark, so no counting of the animals but 50 to a hundred or more.
They managed to call off the dogs and get the horses on past the camp.
If you want to read a good book that is accurate, on western ghost towns, get “Ghosts of the Adobe Walls”, by Nell Murbarger.
50 years ago, she camped in all the old mining towns and wrote about their histories and she is accurate, I have gone back and retraced her trips to many of them.
The horse roundup, was at Signal, Arizona, we were camped at the wall of the Cantina in her photo.
You should write a book about your adventures! I would love to have seen those dogs rounding up all the horses. Dogs are so funny, and I adore mine. We’ve never had any that didn’t have quite a personality, but then I think a lot of that depends on teh owner and interaction.
For a long time, NC was the top gold producing state that sent gold back to the old world. Hard to believe. We also have quite a history of producing top quality mica. History is so cool, and I’ll never get to read half the books on the subject taht I want to!
We have more copperheads here than rattlers. We do have one weed, long seed pods like a skinny bean—when it dries and you brush against it, it sounds exactly like a rattler. I was out with the dogs one winter day and did. I was three feet in the air and six sideways before I realized what it was. The dogs were all looking at me like I’d lost my mind. I laughed til I almost wet my pants.
I was raised reading Zane Gray and Lois L’Amour. Recently got my hands on a copy of LL autobiography. Fascinating. It was well written, like sitting down and talking to him. If they’d let school kids read stuff like that instead of the garbage tehy force on them, we’d have a lot more avid readers.
Have a great day, Granny! I always enjoy talking with you.