Practical Highland history
Jul. 21st, 2023 01:23 pmFandabi Dozi's Youtube channel, about wilderness survival and historical crafts and practices in the Scottish Highlands, is a really excellent resource for my fandoms, as well as being fascinating in its own right. I highly recommend checking out the videos if you've not come across it before! And I wanted to recommend one recent video which is of especial relevance. He's testing out the claim made by Edward Burt in his Letters from the North of Scotland that Highlanders sometimes deliberately wet their plaids when rolling up in them to sleep outdoors, because it actually kept them warmer in cold weather. Burt was very probably one of the sources D. K. Broster used in writing The Flight of the Heron, and she repeats this claim:
But of course historical sources—and perhaps especially outsiders like Burt, who may misinterpret or misunderstand things, or just be lied to—are not necessarily reliable... It's really cool to see a practical experiment of a historical statement like this, and the video is lots of fun!
But Ewen, without stiffness, declined, saying that a wet plaid was of no consequence, and indeed but kept one the warmer. Some, he added, and the Englishman gasped at the information, wrung them out at night in water for that reason.(chapter 1.6)
But of course historical sources—and perhaps especially outsiders like Burt, who may misinterpret or misunderstand things, or just be lied to—are not necessarily reliable... It's really cool to see a practical experiment of a historical statement like this, and the video is lots of fun!
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Date: Jul. 21st, 2023 06:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 21st, 2023 06:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 21st, 2023 06:56 pm (UTC)I also wonder about climate change. Scotland would've been more icy in the 18th century, would it not?
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Date: Jul. 22nd, 2023 03:47 pm (UTC)I don't know exactly how much colder, but yes—partly because of modern climate change, but also because it was still the Little Ice Age.
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Date: Jul. 23rd, 2023 10:13 am (UTC)Another channel I mostly follow out of interest and fascinating talks about the subjects, but also research, is . Although it's Viking-centric, obviously, Jimmy is an archeologist doing his PhD and his subjects are always very carefully and thoroughly researched and presented in a very entertaining way. I find it really interesting also beyond my interest for Vikings, just for the sake of it.
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Date: Jul. 23rd, 2023 03:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 23rd, 2023 11:01 am (UTC)I made a tweed coat (as part of my LRP kit, I should put up a picture some time) and it is amazingly windproof and sort of situationally-warm - in that when it's cold, it's really warm; when it's temperate, it's not too warm because it breathes well. Every time we have challenging weather at events I come away thinking, it's amazing how good these materials and these garments are at handling the weather conditions they were, uh, originally developed for. (Really shouldn't be that suprising...) Like, a lot of people last weekend walking around with mud and water soaking up their skirts and trousers from long wet grass, and I'm like, yeah my socks are getting wet but everything above mid-calf is still dry.
(I kind of half disagree on what he says about linen as a base layer - I can see why he says it because there is that clamminess that eg: wool flannel doesn't have, but for me even very soft wool is too itchy to have against skin. I also have an Orenberg-style goat-down shawl and it has to be really cold before I can deal with it touching my skin.)
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Date: Jul. 23rd, 2023 03:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 25th, 2023 03:44 am (UTC)But mostly I'm amused by the possibility of Ewen winding Keith up. And if so, it suggests that there's a whole tradition of using this particular tall tale to wind up Southerners... XD
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Date: Jul. 25th, 2023 04:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 29th, 2023 01:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 29th, 2023 02:56 pm (UTC)