Fleshing out the Barghest

Putting the last little bits of monster mud on the Barghest over the weekend. I’ld proclaim the monster mud finished, but I’ve decided to hide a couple tie downs into the legs. Sure, it stands up just fine as is, but I want it to withstand weather if it needs to, and hiding a couple tie downs should be no problem.

From 2013 buildup
From 2013 buildup
From 2013 buildup

With some luck, I should be able to get some painting accomplished on Friday.

From 2013 buildup

Slow going

Between basketball and skiing and school with the kids, slow going on progress.

Working on a head for the Barghest.

Ordering seeds for the year, I’m looking forward to seeing how well these pumpkins do.

Should prove to be interesting jacks.

Little side project that got interrupted. “Witch Jars” of Pumpkinrot fame. Got some additions to the idea I couldn’t get to till the weather warms up.

Been looking over RadoJavor lately.

Didn’t realize it at the time, but back in 2010, it was a pic that he did (but uncredited on the site I originally saw it) that started this whole Harvest thing.

It was sitting as the wallpaper on my work computer (since a pic of some skulls I made was found offensive and I was asked to change) when the weather decided to destroy most the things we had built for 2010. The more I stared at it, the more I came to realize how fun it would be to recreate.

Well, finding him has perhaps provided inspiration for 2014. (no way I could do this with the Barghest and stuff going this year.

Looking forward by looking back.

Couple things first…

Just performed more than a dozen automagical updates to the site, so some things might not be quite up to snuff. I’ve been squashing what bugs I’ve found and some of the things look a little ‘off’, and I’m trying to locate that problem in the new code.

Plotting the course for 2013 started early. Extremely early. Starting January of 2012, we made the decision that 2012’s graveyard addition was going to be a one-off, and 2013 was going to be something else. So, in the plan with building Trevor was, specifically, NOT KEEPING HIM. This was a bit harder than I thought, though. Even though that was my plan, when I had him mostly finished around July 2012, I was really thinking maybe we should do it 2 years…

But we held firm, and Trevor is sold and gone. Best part is he’s not that far, so we’ll get to stop and say ‘hi’ to him next year none the less.

With the graveyard retired, it was time to look towards 2013. I sat down and critiqued every year. What went well, what didn’t. Where I went wrong with the yard.

We came up with a common theme of the mistakes I make: TOO MUCH, TOO CROWDED.

Taking my 3 favorite years:

#3, 2012

2012 was incredibly fun. Easily the best year for the whole pumpkin carving party, we learned to SPREAD THEM OUT better than in 2011. I think we hit the magic number, too at ~115 pumpkins. More is going to be getting into that crowded territory.

The only reason this doesn’t rate higher is I’m not a huge fan of the whole graveyard thing as it being too ‘ordinary’. Even when you make a transi tomb.

#2, 2007

2007 was the culmination of a dream of mine. We started with the whole skulls on a stick routine way back in 2005, but it was 2007 that we really EMBRACED it. 100 skulls, 75 stakes made one of the most fantastically original scenes I’ve ever managed.

Hard to believe I messed with it so much in 2008, trying to cram in over 300 skulls, 200 stakes, Fred, and a hut into that same space. Once again too much.

#1: 2010.

The Harvest was an accident. We had worked HARD and spent most of the year working towards a whole temple theme transition in 2010. Then God decided it sucked and destroyed most of it when the wind took out our gazebo and most the year’s props with it.

I think it was August and I was left sitting with absolutely nothing, wondering what I could possibly bring together for Halloween in time, and not wanting to do a rehash of those skulls again when someone on the Halloween Forum decided to poke fun at “people who only put out some corn stalks and pumpkins”. As if that were some lower form of decorating. I took it as a challenge to make ‘nothing but corn stalks and pumpkins’ interesting. 60 pumpkins was too much for me, so we invited some neighbors to help, and the annual harvest party was born.

2013, I think it’s time to merge these two basic themes together. Return to our roots. Mix some of the spiked skulls into the corn. Spike some pumpkins like we did in 2009 while we’re at it…Look back.