Wednesday, 4 December 2024

Christmas log benches. Just logs. And cake.

My best friend is Miggy. Although she's imaginary, time is short in the Christmas rush so she's going to help me with this post about log benches. 

Go on then, Migs. You start. 

Miggy: It's nice to have a yule log this time of year.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/yongjiet/3121164565

Are you sure this is a log, Miggy?

It's a yule log, yes.

Are you sure it's a bench? 

There's a little deer sitting on it. And it's time to be getting the log benches in for Christmas.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/felibrilu/11239452344


This isn't a bench. It isn't even a log. It's a Christmas cake.

No, it isn't. This is a Christmas cake.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/87959586@N03/8048479841

Come on, Miggy. You know that log is a cake.

Well, yes, in one sense it's a cake. In that you can eat it. But it's a log. 
Shall we call it a yule log? 

Fair enough, Migs. But I meant the kind of log that comes from a tree bench

Tree Bench, Seattle


A log bench. 

https://www.flickr.com/photos/vox/52667243 

Oh, I see. The kind you make a bench from.

Exactly. This is Benchsite, remember.  B-E-N-C-H . . .

You don't have to spell it out. 

I just want to make it clear that a log and a bench are not necessarily the same thing.


my photo, Schimmert, Netherlands


Log or bench? Looks like both to me.

Well, ok, maybe they are.

Anyway. It's time to be bringing in the yule log for the fire.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/cpstorm/67362576

I already said that.

So who's going to go out in the cold and bring in the yule log?

They say Christmas is for children. I think children should do it. 



Children are too busy watching Christmas telly. 

Everyone likes a nice fire while watching the Christmas repeats specials.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/megaul/4167878788

Yes, and while opening their presents.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/eugene/3162264971 

This present wouldn't be a cake by any chance?

Of course. Who doesn't want cake for Christmas? 

This story is not about cake though. It's logs.

Just logs. And log benches

And log cutters?




As you know, I have a bit of a thing for hunky log guys.




No woodcutters. No cake. No hunks. Just log that have been made into benches.

But isn't it going to be very boring looking at log benches? One log looks much like another.




http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Zusmarshausen-Holzh


It's hard to tell the difference, isn't it?

Not at all. You can sit on a log and drink your hot chocolate. 

https://www.flickr.com/photos/freeformkatia/2273716055

You can sit on a bench and drink your cappuccino.





You can't sit on a cake though. Can you? 

You can actually. Here are three little birdies sitting on a yule log.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/photoverulam/3142201432

The thing is, there is a fine line between a bench and a log. 





This bench in Ireland has become at one with the tree.


https://www.facebook.com/RareIrishStuff/photos/

Wow! This bench is a star.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/probonobaker/4204802239

What is this?

It's a bûche de noël made with chocolate genoise and bittersweet glaze. The shooting star is mendiants with candied violets, gold dragees, and freeze dried strawberries, mangoes, and blueberries.

I can see that. By why is it here?

Well, I referred to stars and this is a shooting star . . .

Just stick to the point will you.

OK, here is a stick bench for you. 


https://www.flickr.com/photos/lithuania

Nice. 

A compliment at last! I'm going to log that.



This doesn't look like a log somehow. What is it?

Well, technically it's bread . . .

Gingerbread. At least it's not cake.

Yes, and it's a bench. Sort of. 

This log has already been made into a bench.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/idiolector/8636742804/


Unlike here, where the logs are waiting to be cut up.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/eldriva/13954008473

Are these logs cakes by any chance?

I couldn't possibly comment. 

Here is a green log bench which sits naturally in the forest.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/easypickle/1300186442

It doesn't look green to me. This looks green:


https://www.flickr.com/photos/sorakirei/4227130731

I'm going to overlook this cake and move on.

As we have seen previously, a log bench can be ever so plane plain.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/threeseamonsters/3585274590


If we've seen these previously, why do we have to see them again? Why can't we see some log benches which are more than just . . . logs? Something with a few frills.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/probonobaker/5243350494

Miggy, this is a cake and you know it.

Yes, its a bûche de noël in a Belgian chocolate cage, made with almond dacquoise, vanilla genoise, framboise syrup, raspberry buttercream, Belgian chocolate glaze, and gold dragees

Can we get back on the subject now?  Here are some logs which have been value-added into comfy seats.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/caribb/ 

Or you can just take bits of wood lying around and make a bench. 

https://www.flickr.com/photos/mikecogh/10187958544


There is no need to log the rainforest for wood to make benches.

http://rfny.net/

Just walking along the beach you can find a driftwood bench out of whatever you have to hand.

http://www.etsy.com/shop/carensilvestri


I have a Mars bar to hand so I guess I could make a bench like this. 

https://www.flickr.com/photos/hartnupj/145720754


Stop it, Migs! You are ruining this blog.

What? It's not a cake. 

L-O-G-S. It's log benches we're discussing. 

I guess you wish you hadn't axed me to help you.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/nothing/5150721

I'm going to rise above that and press on.

Oh, very funny. I see what you're doing there: Bench. Press.


http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Defense.gov

I'm going to ask you to log off in a minute. Got that? L-O-G  O-F-F! 

You better chill out, Seashell. Logs can do strange things to people. 


https://www.flickr.com/photos/dalboz17/152282514

Remember the Log Lady in Twin Peaks?

As I was saying, a log bench can be simple, like this three piece suite sofa and chairs.


http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Three_Carved_Benches


Or it can be decorative, like these chainsaw otters.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/anguskirk/7348432036

Do otters use chainsaws?

I'm going to ignore that and show you how a log bench can be dressed with decorative log pillows.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/kgnixer/8036969590

Clever. I like the variation in colours and contours. Rather like this log I came across recently. 

https://www.flickr.com/photos/foodiebaker/8300025824


I'm not fooled by this, Miggy. There are forks here: this is cake.

OK, I confess. I have sneaked in a yule log here. It's Christmas, after all.

You always sneak a cake in. And it's doing you no good. 


my photo, Tilburg, Netherlands

I know, I know. A minute on the lips, a year on the hips. But I have an answer to that:





You have sabotaged this bench blog with cakes.  

Sorry. I'm a rubbish editor. I better get back to my kitchen.


my photo, Yarmouth, Isle of Wight

Anyway, I've got cakes to bake.



There are more cakes than benches in this story.

True, but at least I haven't set fire to any benches. 

Unlike your husband, who has destroyed some very valuable benches.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/val_s/5924398105

Yes, His Excellency set fire to a designer bench without realising it cost me twenty thousand pounds. 

https://www.flickr.com/photos/nov2874/15267764389

He confused it with a log bench I guess.

It's easily done. Hey! What's this?

Just a little log fire I thought you'd appreciate.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/probonobaker/5088255992

It's not my designer bench is it?

Good heavens no. It's a bûche chocolate-walnut-rum torte. The logs are sandwiched with plum jam and covered with nocino ganache. The embers are covered with confectioners sugar, the flames are candied orange peel and caramel makes the flames and sparks.

Sounds delicious! We'll have to hurry though.

These guys seem to have their eyes on it.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/proctorarchives/4701017864

Quick! Let's find a log bench to sit on and eat the whole thing.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/boxchain/3167459312


Credits


Miggy is my best imaginary friend. I love her dearly but good heavens she drives me crazy. She's obsessed with cake, which in one way is a good thing because she runs the Make a Wish Cafe here in Fribble-under-Par. By cafe I really mean cake shop because mainly she sells cakes. 





The Christmas yule log (cake) at the start of the story was made by Yongjiet in 2008. https://www.flickr.com/photos/yongjiet/3121164565  Yongjiet's albums include art, sport, food, drinks and desserts. 

The multi-coloured yule log is by Felibrilu at
https://www.flickr.com/photos/felibrilu/11239452344   There is nothing at all in Felibrilu's profile but the photostream reveals cake, buildings, and a certificate of participation for visiting Glasgow's underground vaults. 


Sarah from Coventry is an amateur baker and cake decorator who made the Christmas cake from brandy, fruit, and marzipan in 2011. She confesses to loving the decorating more than the baking. Apparently she always goes a bit over the top with royal icing. She made all of the decorations with plain fondant as she didn't want them to go too hard. The holly leaves were just cut out with a small star cutter and stretched. Her photostream is full of cakes https://www.flickr.com/photos/87959586@N03/8048479841

Ross from Ann Arbor, Michigan is a member of his local Help Save the Ash group. He loves forests. For him, stumbling upon an ash log bench in Bird Hills Park in 2005 was an unexpectedly emotional moment because it's a log from an adult ash tree, killed by the borer. https://www.flickr.com/photos/vox/52667243

The little boy bringing in the yule log was photographed by C.P. Storm, who lives near Ottawa. https://www.flickr.com/photos/cpstorm/67362576 

Meg is a paparazzi currently living in Portland. She photographed her favourite holiday movie - the yule log and the elf - in 2009. There is a fire, of sorts, going on in front of the TV. https://www.flickr.com/photos/megaul/4167878788

The Christmas present cake was photographed by Eugene Wei from Santa Monica in 2008 https://www.flickr.com/photos/eugene/3162264971 


When travelling in Germany I always admire the way they stack their wood, and the arty things they make with it. The log shelter house with a bench in front was photographed by Franzfoto in 2012 and available on Wikicommons at 
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Zusmarshausen-Holzh%C3%BCtte_mit_Sitzbank,_Einladung_Hock_di_na_02.jpg

Several of the beautiful log cakes are from distopian dream girl at Flickr in 2010. The frilly bûche de noël in a chocolate cage  is at  https://www.flickr.com/photos/probonobaker/5243350494.  The shooting star bûche de noël is at  https://www.flickr.com/photos/probonobaker/4204802239 and the bûche de noël - chocolate woodgrain  is at https://www.flickr.com/photos/probonobaker/5288129821 Finally, the campfire buche chocolate-walnut-rum torte logs and embers is at https://www.flickr.com/photos/probonobaker/5088255992  

Maja is the little girl who enjoyed her hot chocolate on a log bench in 2008. The photo was taken by Katia Strieck who is from Ontario but now lives in Philadelphia.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/freeformkatia/2273716055


Three little birdies sitting on a log is a photograph by Richard Gillin, who is a beancounter trying to prove we're not all as dull as... Well, whatever. Richard lives in St Albans in  Hertfordshire and commutes to the Smoke every day to earn a crust. He tries occasionally to take a decent photograph or two and this includes photos for the Chocoholics group. https://www.flickr.com/photos/photoverulam/3142201432/in/photolist-962d8p-5MEB1L

The shiny log bench was one we saw at a campsite in Vlotho, Germany. There are lots of campsites in Germany, and lots of logs. Come to think of it, there are lots of cakes too.

The Hungry Tree is the tree that has grown around the bench in the Kings Inns in Dublin, Ireland. The photograph was sent to me via Facebook https://www.facebook.com/RareIrishStuff/photos/a.115622905188373.28065.114988765251787/555614887855837/ For more crazy Irish benches see http://benchsite.blogspot.co.uk/2015/03/st-patricks-top-o-irish-benches.html

The Bench a Tree Built was photographed by Judy Paris in 2007 at the Planting Fields Arboretum on Long Island's North Shore, on the grounds of the former Coe Family Estate. Judy explains that in 1915, when the family estate in Massachusetts was scheduled to be subdivided, the family decided to rescue two mature copper beeches. The trees were barged across Long Island Sound in the dead of the winter. It was one of the largest tree moving operations in the Northeast. One copper beech survived the trip. The other did not and this bench, as well as some other structures in the garden, came from thathttps://www.flickr.com/photos/lithuania2008/3058886145/

Kevin, aka Idiolector 1.3, photographed Log Wizard, the bench with a chainsaw on it, in 2013. https://www.flickr.com/photos/idiolector/8636742804/  Although I love his photos, especially Street Art and Litteralism, I'm not even going to try summarising Kevin's profile. It involves krypto-pedestrianism and quite a few photos of dog pooh.

The pile of logs cake was baked in 2014 by Eldriva, who has the most fabulous cakes in her photostream. Don't take my word for it - have a look! https://www.flickr.com/photos/eldriva/13954008473

The reclining figure is not Miggy but a sculpture called Music by Mari Andriessen (1961). It's found in the forecourt of the Schouwburg Theatre in Tilburg, North Brabant in the Netherlands. 

Greg is from Pittsburgh, currently living in Seattle. He has some glorious photos of Seattle, my old home town, and he has also photographed a number of log benches, some of which are very difficult to distinguish from logs. In his photograph All natural furniture (2007), he poses the question Log or Bench?  
https://www.flickr.com/photos/easypickle/1300186442  The log bench, found in Karlsruhe in 2007, is certainly natural. Greg says, quite rightly, that it's the Fallingwater of park benches. 

Rebecca Carlson lives in Bethal Park, USA and loves taking photos of awesome rock bands around Pittsburgh. She photographed the slice of green Christmas cake in 2009 https://www.flickr.com/photos/sorakirei/4227130731

The plane plain bench with a plain plane on it is a silver maple log left over from milling. It was photographed by Jason Nemec from Ottawa in 2009. Jason is an art director by day, a woodworker by night. He makes beautiful stuff from logs. https://www.flickr.com/photos/threeseamonsters/3585274590


Doug lives in Montreal and photographs lovely things in Quebec like autumn leaves, and luscious-looking food, and the log bench with white chairbacks. This design of bench is not unique to Quebec though; Dutch designer Jurgen Beys made a very upmarket Tree Trunk Bench back in 1998, which is one of my Alphabet of Dutch Benches. Doug's photostream is at  http://www.flickr.com/photos/caribb/  and he's also on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. 


Mike Coghlan from Adelaide is one of the most prolific bench photographers I have come across. I keep checking his photostream to see what's new and I'm never disappointed. This time I'm using his Bench with Character, a rustic-style bench made from logs.He saw it at Deep Creek in South Australia in 2013  https://www.flickr.com/photos/mikecogh/10187958544


The protest sign about benches in Washington Square were from Rainforests of New York at http://rfny.net/  The protest took place in Washington Square, New York City on  April 22, 2011. I saw it on Flickr at https://www.flickr.com/photos/rfny2011/5644495964


The beautiful driftwood bench looking out to sea is on the California coast at Cambria. It was photographed by Caren Silvestri, a Southern California native, who loves landscapes and macro photos of nature subjects in the garden and at the beach. Oceans, mountains, deserts - as she says, in Southern California they have it all. Her shop is at http://www.etsy.com/shop/carensilvestri



The Mars bar was photographed in 2006 by John Hartnup, a computer guy from Leamington Spa in the UK. John says he's not the only John, but a John. He has no eccentricities. None. As for the Mars bar, it's now one of the many photos in the Mars Bar group    https://www.flickr.com/photos/hartnupj/145720754

Tom Burke is from Hilo, Hawaii but currently lives in Reykjavik, Iceland. He's fairly tall and works as a miscellaneous problem solver. He took the photograph of the ax in the logs way back in 2005 https://www.flickr.com/photos/nothing/5150721


Pararescuemen applicants were bench pressing a wooden log in a mud pit during a screening process held by the Air Force 306th Rescue Squadron in Tucson, Ariz. In this test the applicants do a timed 3-mile run, 1500- meter swim, calisthenics, and other various tasks. The photo was taken by Airman 1st Class Veronica Pierce, U.S. Air Force on April 21, 2006. This image is a work of a U.S. military or Department of Defense employee, taken or made as part of that person's official duties. As a work of the U.S. federal government, the image is in the public domain.  http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Defense.gov

Creepy King Me is MattDe Turck, who is a photographer and graphic designer in Rochester, New York. The photo was taken in Rochester Park in 2006  https://www.flickr.com/photos/dalboz17/152282514


The Three Carved Benches were near Llangollen Canal, photographed by Paul Farmer for Geograph in 2009
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Three_Carved_Benches_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1243928.jpg?uselang=en-gb


The carved bench with otters and fish was photographed by Angus Kirk in 2012 at Rooksbury Mill Local Nature Reserve in Andover, UK. https://www.flickr.com/photos/anguskirk/7348432036

The decorative log pillows were see on a bench inside a nail spa. They were photographed in  2012 by KG Nixer, aka niXerKG, who is a web developer in Chicago.   https://www.flickr.com/photos/kgnixer/8036969590

The white and chocolate log cake with Varlhona Chocolate Mousse is apparently a healthier version - healthier than what, I'm not sure. It was made and photographed in  2012 by foodiebaker.com  I saw it at https://www.flickr.com/photos/foodiebaker/8300025824  I know nothing about Foodie Baker but her photostream is full of, um, food. Lots of it. Food fabulous food. And an album from Cambodia. 

I have two husbands. One is Mungo, my imaginary husband, who features in lots of other Benchsite stories. The other is His Excellency, who has a reputation for destruction, even when he means well. He's a philosopher and, to say the least, not a very practical person. In the past two autumns he has unwittingy burned two very expensive designer benches. Last year this was forgiveable because we had to keep warm. But this year . . . well, he fell for it again. You can appreciate his difficulties if you know his history. Mungo, on the other hand, keeps a good workbench. Read about both of them at  http://benchsite.blogspot.co.uk/2013/09/workbench-wonders-two-husbands-lots-of.html

I covered burning benches last autumn and there are quite a few benches on fire, one way or another, on the internet. The burning bench shown here is by Valentine Svennson from Stockholm. Photographed in 2003, it is one of several fires in his Retro collection. I'm not going to ask whether Valentine started the bench fire. https://www.flickr.com/photos/val_s/5924398105


Nov2874 has some lovely photographs in his Ride Around the Countryside album, including the burning log in the fireplace, photographed in 2014. https://www.flickr.com/photos/nov2874/15267764389 I am pleased to say that this log is not the expensive designer log bench I purchased in Japan. Phew! That's twenty thousand pounds saved then. 


The men on the benches in front of the fire were students at Proctor in the 1950s. Proctor Academy is in Andover in New Hampshire. There's an Andover in old Hampshire too but no academy there as far as I know.The photo is from the Proctor Archives at https://www.flickr.com/photos/proctorarchives/4701017864


The slice of cake with a knive is a 2008 photograph by Alex Cockroach. He says D's mom made the cake and it was yummy. Alex Cockroach is a resident of Bywater, which is the upper 9th ward in New Orleans. His photostream includes from photos of benches under water. https://www.flickr.com/photos/boxchain/3167459312  And speaking of cockroaches, there are some brilliant insect benches at http://benchsite.blogspot.co.uk/2015/06/national-insect-week-buzz-about-benches.html


If you'd like to tuck into more edible benches we have plenty on Benchsite.
http://benchsite.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/edible-benches-with-jench-de-bench.html  Try a tasty Italian one at  
http://benchsite.blogspot.co.uk/2014/11/tasty-italian-benches.html  or some very nice ice cream benches at http://benchsite.blogspot.co.uk/2015/07/we-all-scream-for-ice-cream-benches.html


Friday, 1 November 2024

Talking Turkey Benches for Thanksgiving

  My friend Troy is here for Thanksgiving. He's a pilgrim from Dry Heaves, Minnesota.  


 
It's nearly Thanksgiving and we're here to talk Turkey.



I don't mean that kind of turkey though. 

I mean this kind: the one on the Bosphorus, where Europe meets Asia.


I'm thinking mosques . . . 


and carpets . . .


www.etsy.com/shop/JayBazaar

and cats on benches.

Marmaris, Turkey

And grand bazaars.



Ma'm I was expecting another kind of turkey.

Well, I wondered. I see you're wearing your pilgrim gear. 

Yes, Ma'm. It's Thanksgiving time in Canada, and in the good old US of A. We're plumping up the turkeys . . . 


. . . and sharpening the shears. 

Do you normally use shears to carve a turkey?

No, Ma'm. Where I come from we use a sabre.



That's just weird. And anyway, I don't eat turkey. 

To me, Thanksgiving is all about pumpkin pie benches.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/78208664@N00/253065157

Or as they'd say in Turkey, kabak pasta banklar.

But before we go any further, I'd like to clarify a misunderstanding about Turkey. 

Yes, I agree. The little fellow in the picture above is not a turkey; it's a dog dressed as a turkey.

Thanks, but that isn't what I mean.

No, thank you! I'm honoured to be here, Ma'm. I come from Dry Heaves, Minnesota, which is a modest little place and I am grateful every day for the opportunities I've had.

Thanks, Troy, but . . . 

Thanksgiving is all about gratitude and I've got a heart full of gratitude.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/aga_mum/4706711759

I'm sure you have but . . . 

I'd like to thank a few people. First, I'd like to thank my mom for having me.

http://www.rakuten.co.jp/

And thanks, Mom, for teaching me to please say please. 

And thank you.




My mom is of German ancestry. All through my life she's been a brick.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/frnetz/14517152083/

That's all very well, Troy, but . . . 

My Mexican friends Drida and Friego have also been brilliant. 





Thanks, guys. Or as we'd say in DF . . . 


https://www.flickr.com/photos/ellohir/2074602394 

I'd also like to thank the good ladies of Ballyfrumpy in County Offhand in Ireland. They crocheted this excellent sweater for me.




And this sweater as well. And the hat to go with it. And the gloves. And the scarf.



I am truly blessed.


www.etsy.com/shop/PattisFunnyFarm

And a special thank you to Lady Jess.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/8458761@N08/5292809230

Ever since I've been on Paradise Island she has made me feel at home.





We really enjoyed Lying Together.




Yes, well, the less said about that the better I think. 

Anyway, Lord and Lady Brassica are on their private island in the Caribbean. Who wants to share an island when you-know-what is still going around? 


Just remember three years ago. There was no sport.



                                          http://benchsite.blogspot.co.uk/2015/09/miggys-good-sport-benches.html

No flights.



No libraries.


No galleries.



Luckily, we still had benches. And Thanksgiving of course.

And I certainly do give thanks, Ma'm. Lady Jess and I met through Young Male Readers dot com. Her husband Lord Brassica sent me this bench with a very special message. 



I'm not entirely sure what it means but I certainly am grateful for it. 

Troy, if you've finished thanking people . . . 

And I'd also like to say thank you to people who put up benches in parks saying thank you. Because parks bring me great joy.


I am going to stop you right there, Troy. I want to show some benches in Turkey and you are gobbling up this whole blog. I want to talk turkey.

I thought we were talking turkey. As in Indian Bird. As in Peruvian Bird or French Bird. Or even Dutch chicken. 

No, I mean the other Turkey. As in Constantinople, the Queen of Cities, where east meets west. 


That's a very poetic turn of phrase you've got there, Ma'm, if you don't mind me saying.

Thank you, Troy. I'd forgotten you're a poet. Istanbul is full of poetry benches, like this one at Heybeliada on the Sea of Marmara.


In fact, there is a whole park of open books.


I'd like to sit in the sun on one of those benches and read some poetry. 

That's what this cat is doing. 



There are a lot of cats on benches in Istanbul.

Timboli, the Istanbul Station cat


And then you can visit the Blue Mosque, which isn't quite this blue.




Ma'm, Istanbul is awesome.

Yes. The words Turkish and Delight come to mind.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/colinwarren/11865470526

Couldn't you just sink into a pretty bench like this and sip your Turkish coffee?


www.etsy.com/shop/JayBazaar

No, it's too strong for me. I normally have an Americano.

Boooooorrrrrrrring! 

Anyway, in Istanbul there are plenty of places to sit.



Throughout Turkey they have banklar çok - lots of benches.



We have quite a few turkey benches here in the US of A as well.


www.etsy.com/shop/outbackinthebarn


And I'd love to have a seat but now I need to get rolling.



You're off to Dry Heaves then.

Yes, and I'm already thinking about Thanksgiving. 


Me too. That reminds me, I've got a pumpkin ready to make my pies.




Wineglass, moustache, manbag . . . I think you've made a mistake here, Ma'm. I met this fellow in Potirons in France. He's a famous chef. 

Oui. Il s'appelle Jench de Bench.

I'd like to say thanks to him.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/dreamsjung/12241111044

Of course I couldn't make a pie out of Jench. Not after all the help he gave me on the Edible Benches blog

I guess I never got round to thanking him.



I hope you'll enjoy your Thanksgiving dinner, Troy. Who will you be sharing your turkey with?

Oh, it's always the same people round the table.


And sometimes The Country Gentleman.

An Early Thanksgiving 1926, NC Wyeth

We had to take a wall out of our house to accommodate everybody. 

Thanksgiving Day 1953, Bernie Fuchs


Well, it's too late now to show all the lovely Turkish benches I gathered. The benches from Turkey are going to have to wait for another time. 

Sorry, Seashell. I got the wrong end of the drumstick here. 

I went in like a whirling dervish and messed up your Turkish blog.




Well, all I can say to your readers is Sabrınız için teşekkür ederiz - thank you for your patience.

That's really nice of you, Troy.

And I'd like to say thank you to your readers for bearing with me on this side of the pond.




Alright, Troy, happy Thanksgiving. And thanks to everyone who has persisted with this story. I don't know where you are in the world so this is the best I can do:


https://www.flickr.com/photos/alexander_wrege/2998403001

Actually, the Turkish thank you is missing.

Teşekkür ederim.

I forgot you were a linguist, Troy.

It's been great sharing Turkey with you. 


www.etsy.com/shop/euclidstreetshop


Stay safe! And don't forget to sign our guest bench before you go. 

www.etsy.com/shop/SasafrasPrintables

Credits

Troy breezed into our town a few summers ago. He's normcore and his occupation is Pilgrim. Apart from that, all we know about him is this: 1) he comes from Dry Heaves, Minnesota, where he learned to read poetry in a particularly alluring voice  2) he never wears shoes  3) he is extremely polite and calls ladies Ma'm  4) he speaks a lot of languages fluently 5) he carries a manbag filled with books, a violin and a ladder in case anyone needs to be rescued.  

Matt Stangis is a visual junkie who lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He photographed the turkey on a bench with a pumpkin in October 2008. Matt reminded me that Thanksgiving in Canada is different from the States: in Canada Thanksgiving is on the second Monday in October, which this year was October 13th. In the States, Thanksgiving is on the fourth Thursday in November - the 27th this year.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/docksidepress/2982841359


Lori X is a designer. Turistik yuzer tesis isl der and the couple on a bench in Istanbul was photographed by Lori in 2012. My Turkish isn't very good but I could make out the word Touristhttps://www.flickr.com/photos/lorix/7962364616

Jenny is a recent graduate in landscape architecture. She was in Istanbul this year, where she took some gorgeous photographs of the Blue Mosque, the Hagia Sophia, and the benches where you can see the mosque in the background. https://www.flickr.com/photos/8714491@N05/14405449628 For a photo tour of Istanbul it's worth a look at Jenny's photostream.

The Marmaris cats both real and statue, were photographed on and around a bench in Marmaris, Turkey by Rachel Oliver. 

The two kilim rug benches in the story are by Jay at Jay Bazaar, not in Turkey but in Brooklyn.  www.etsy.com/shop/JayBazaar  Jay's Bazaar is full of lovely kilim rugs, ornaments, and vintage jewelry. 


David Casteel is an elderly curmudgeon from Dallas. He photographed the Grand Bazaar bench on a trip to Istanbul in 2006. He has a whole album full of photos from the trip at  https://www.flickr.com/photos/8712554@N02/873341385


Lady Jessica Brassica is a fashionista and former model with Studio Joop from Overbearing in Holland. Now she has her own fashion house at Ballyfrumpy in County Offhand in Ireland. She loves shopping at her replica mall and having poetry read by Young Male Readers dot com. She is happily married to Lord Brassica, Fifth Earl of Drizzly, a gentleman farmer and expert on both cows and picnic benches. Lord Brassica's generosity extends to Thank You benches for the community, as shown here.



But this summer Lord B has been rather busy with his dog Pru, his horse Tonks, and his 1947 Land Rover, so Lady Jess has been spending rather a lot of time at her beach hut with Troy.  The novel Lying Together is by Gaynor Arnold. 

Pinké is a native Texan who makes dog happy art, including Churkey - that's Chuck the dog dressed as a turkey for Thanksgiving 2012. Chuck regrets being addicted to salmon dog treats but apparently there aren't any rehab programs available in Houston.https://www.flickr.com/photos/8113246@N02/8203258965
If you like dogs, there are plenty of great dog benches here on Benchsite.


Pascal lives in Heidelburg and amuses me with his Lego mini-persons. In this story we've got Robert, a Lego person on a bench with a turkey and a sword. The title is Partial Amnesia; that's apparently because Robert only faintly remembered something about Monday, benches, and bonus points for birdshttps://www.flickr.com/photos/pasukaru76/5631501667


Christel lives in Trelleborg in Sweden. The bench groaning with pumpkins of all sizes was photographed from the car near Trelleborg in autumn 2006. https://www.flickr.com/photos/78208664@N00/253065157

AGA~mum's photostream has a lot of amazing benches from around the world. She has an eye for a bench, does AGA~mum. I have a heart full of gratitude for her lovely Heart of Gratitude bench, photographed in 2010. It's in a beautiful garden setting and the bench message says it all.   https://www.flickr.com/photos/aga_mum/4706711759

Thanks Mom is from Rakuten in Japan http://www.rakuten.co.jp/  From what I can gather, Rakuten is sort of the Etsy of Japan. Call me fussy, but this particular Mom doesn't look very German; I wonder if Troy is telling porkie pies?


Maik Meid is involved in fundraising, photography, and non-profit social media. He photographed the Danke image in 2014, which is one of many different bricks made for the Spendenstein project.       
https://www.flickr.com/photos/frnetz/14517152083/

Antonio S, aka Ellohir, is an engineering student from Valencia in Spain. The gracias image was photographed in 2007.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/ellohir/2074602394  

Patti Colvin from Oakville, Washington lives on a funny farm. Yes, really. She has a farm full of critters she loves, writes about, and makes things from. Her products are largely organic: the sheep are sheared by her, wool washed by her, and wool spun by her on my drop spindle. Earrings from pop tops, paper mache "Littles", art journals that look like the "Book of Shadows" - Patti loves making something out of nothing. That includes the barn wood sign I am blessed, shown in the story.  www.etsy.com/shop/pattisfunnyfarm

*Lie, pronounced Lee, is from Antwerp. She sent a message - merci with roses and chocolate - to all her Flickerito friends back in 2010. What a nice thing to do. Delightful photo and lots of different languages.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/8458761@N08/5292809230  


Dragon Dream888 seems to keep an eye out for benches. She was walking about a shopping mall in Washington DC in 2009 and photographed the Thank you for not reclining bench. It's one of many in her photostream at  https://www.flickr.com/photos/52807531@N00/4183863804



The Ellen Wachtel commemorative bench is in Central Park in New York City. The photographed was taken in 2010 by Michael Kazarnowicz, who lives in Stockholm.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/encee/5015846088

Troy is a well-travelled pilgrim and a bit of a linguist. He's quite right that in Turkey the country the word for turkey the bird means Indian Bird. The Indian word for turkey means Peruvian bird. And the Greek word for turkey means French bird. However, in Malaysia the word for turkey means Dutch chicken. How does Troy know all this? Probably he looked up 1,411 QI Facts at  www.qi.com/1411  page 216.


Ryan Ward is an attorney from Santa Monica, California. He photographed the peeling orange bench in Istanbul in 2011. Note the crest imprint, which appears on lots of things throughout the city.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/ryanaward/6124826130



William Avery Hudson from New York is a communications consultant and photographer. He photographed the Heybeliada Turkisk poetry bench in 2008. Heybeliada is one of the Prince's Islands in the Sea of Marmara, where there are many poetry benches along the seafront.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/williamaveryhudson/2823734944



Matthias Buehler is a German software developer living in Denmark. He has a nice collection of bench photos and is one of many people who photographed the Istanbul open-book benches. https://www.flickr.com/photos/kakadu/14524464399   



There are many cats in Turkey. Many, many cats. Quite of few of them appear on Flickr pages. I liked this one called Catnap, by Jeremy Brooks in 2014. Jeremy is a software engineer with a passion for photography, especially vintage neon signs. His photos are mainly urban scenes, which is great because this includes lots and lots of benches. Love the closeup of patterns in a metal bench!  https://www.flickr.com/photos/jeremybrooks/15361037117

By the way, if you like cats, let Meredith guide you through the cream of Cat Benches. If you think turkeys are for the birds, there are no spring chickens but a lot of nice hen benches. 


Two things you probably know about Turkey: Turkish coffee and Turkish delight. Both were captured in a beautiful photograph by Colin Warren in 2013. Colin is from Geelong in Austrailia. He's one of those people who gets out there with his camera and photographs all kinds of things - shoes, rocks, plants, dead rabbits - he makes everything look good.    https://www.flickr.com/photos/colinwarren/11865470526



Justin Lehmann, from San Francisco, photographed the benches outside Istanbul's Blue Mosque in 2011. Lots of people photograph these benches as they are very photogenic (the benches, not the people). I think Justin's black and white photograph is very effective.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/soledadbrother/6316314435



There are many ancient ruins in Turkey, including Roman amphitheatres with rows and rows of stone benches for watching gory spectacles. The amphitheatre pictured here is in SideTurkey, photographed in 2014 by Jacqueline Poggi from Provence. She has amazing photographs of buildings and she loves cathedrals.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/jacqueline_poggi/12907820884

Cindy Oppel is Out Back in the Barn and she sure knows how to celebrate the American holidays. For Thanksgiving alone she's got a handpainted pilgrim boy and girl, a handpainted turkey, and this lovely turkey bench to rest your feathers. Handpainted wood crafts, shop home items, homemade jam - she's got it all for every holiday. We've already had her harvest bench back in the fall and, come St. Patrick's Day in March, I look forward to her Irish bench too. www.etsy.com/shop/outbackinthebarn

Allen is a school district maintenance supervisor and freelance photographer living in Kansas City and Henderson, Nevada. He is an obvious fan of Las Vegas and his photostream is full of roadside Americana - gas stations, cars, motels, neon signs, packaging and suburban life. Oh, this is heavenly nostalgia for me! Allen also collects stuff, like the 1900s postcard of a turkey towing a pumpkin. This was Allen's greeting to his Flickr pals at Thanksgiving 2012. https://www.flickr.com/photos/roadsidepictures/8206417339   


The turkey hotdog is an unusual thing and not something I'd like to eat at Thanksgiving. Well, it certainly caught my eye. It was photographed in 2012 by Jason Brackins, a software developer originally from Bethesda, Maryland. https://www.flickr.com/photos/leff/8208546895

Jench de Bench is a chef from Potirons in France and last year I asked him to help me with my Edible Benches story. Which he duly did, sort of. Well, no, he didn't. He kept disappearing and after a great deal of searching for him throughout France, I gave up and edited the post myself.  I don't mind saying, it's a bit of a mess but still, there are a lot of tasty benches on there.

Jason Taellious from Olympia, Washington likes reflections, long exposures, words, flyer art, architecture and art. His photostream is full of all these things. There's a lot of great stuff and I liked the photo lexicons, especially the word Merci, photographed in Paris in 2013. 
https://www.flickr.com/photos/dreamsjung/12241111044



I love the idea of a cranky messiah. There is one on Flickr and he says he didn't do it. I think he might be from Baltimore but that's really none of my business. The photograph from 2008, Thanks for nothing, is just what I was looking for https://www.flickr.com/photos/24613099@N05/3103515782



Clotho98 from Richmond, Virginia is a no good floozie (her words, not mine). She photographs a lot of vintage advertising and magazine covers, including the the Thanksgiving one from a Boy's Life magazine in November 1927. https://www.flickr.com/photos/clotho98/6389456203



Gisela Giardino lives in Buenos Aires but comes from somewhere far from there. She gets on well with herself and is with herself all the time. She is pretty clear who she is, as shown by the long list on her Flickr profile. Thank you was written in the sand by someone in Nov 2006 and Gisela photographed it before it got washed away.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/gi/304120801


Alexander Wrege says he's alive. Well, that's a good start. Alexander is a teacher from Germany, now living in Toledo in the United States. It looks like he gets out and about all over the place, doing lots of stuff like hiking and kayaking and having fun. Alive, in other words. His photo shows a lot of thank yous in different languages. Very handy for this particular story, though I don't see one in Turkish.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/alexander_wrege/2998403001


Michelle in LA has lots of greeting cards in her Euclid Street Shop. I love the card that says Thanks a B-nch with some lovely balloons where the letter E should be. That would be Thanks a Bench, which is just what I need for this blog. It does occur to me that the balloons are standing in for the letter U, which would be Thanks a Bunch - an entirely different message.  www.etsy.com/shop/euclidstreetshop  

Jessica from SasifrasPrintables in Ohio tells me that a guest bench is an alternative to your run-of-the-mill guestbook- guests sign a blank bench with their name and a message for the bride and groom, and after the wedding the bench is finished and used either in the home or in the new couple's garden/yard. SasifrasPrintables does DIY downloadable and printable holiday and wedding designs such as the Sign our guest bench print. You choose the size of sign you want, download it, and print it out on your own printer. Easy peasy!  www.etsy.com/shop/SasafrasPrintables 


If at the end of this story you have a lust for further travel, you can go lots of places here on Benchsite. See a fiesta of Mexican benches, for example, or an alphabet of Dutch benches. The 2017 Year of the Rooster Bench will take you to China. Get high on alpine benches, or tasty Italian ones. Every summer Miggy and Mungo and I go on our bench-finding missions; see our impossible Greek mission, or what happened when we cycled down the Danube. And for some truly amazing Japanese benches, see http://benchsite.blogspot.co.uk/2013/04/spring-comes-to-fribble-via-japan.html