Showing posts with label obsidian. Flint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label obsidian. Flint. Show all posts

Monday, February 18, 2013

COLE HURST; Flintknapping Hall of Fame Flintknapper # 19

COLE HURST, MEGA BLADE MAKER
By Ray Harwood



"As of late many knappers are creating ever larger
pieces of lithic art in the form of huge bifaces.
Emery Coons reportedly percussion bifaced a 50 inch
preform and managed a 40 inch finished neofact. I
wrote the Coon's family and requested information and
a photo by received no response.
At the California knap in this year, large the key
word.
Many from other states, such as Coons in Oregon, are
also thinking large and obsidian suppliers are selling
more mega slabs than ever.
Named the Orcutt syndrome after an old time knapper
named Ted Orcutt, whom was known for his massive
biface work. More later..." Ray Harwood Aug. 30. 2000










MEGA BLADE KNAPPING WITH COLE HURST
By Ray Harwood

PHASE ONE OF COLE'S MEGA BLADE:


PHASE TWO OF COLE'S MEGA BLADE:


PHASE 3 OF COLE'S MEGA BLADE



THESE PHOTOS OF COLE KNAPPING SHOWS THE IMPORTANCE OF SUPPORTING THE BIFACE DURING THE CAREFUL PRECISSION KNAPPING PROCESS. The slightest mistake can lead to disaster, in that a lot of time and effort on a very rare piece of stone is gone in a fraction of a second....stone is a very unforgiving medium to work with.
TED ORCUTT UNDOUBTEDLY KNAPPED WITH THE SAME PROCESSES.








.

COLE HURST: MEGA BLADE KANPPER






Many have heard of the large biface knapper of the last century, Ted Orcutt,. Many don’t know that there is an every growing number of modern flintknappers that are following in Orcutt’s foot steps. I plan to showcase as many of these new obsidian biface masters as I can. Here is the first mega blade knapper, Cole Hurst.


Cole Hurst was born October 14th 1960 in Fort Madison, Iowa and within a few years his family moved to East Wenatchee, Washington where he still resides.
Growing up he found arrowheads, scrapers and fragments of stone artifacts which sparked his curiosity in how they were made. Cole started flintknapping in the mid 80's when he was in his mid 20's. Cole Hurst didn’t know what I was doing, just experimenting. It was in the late 80's that he got a copy of "The art of Flintknapping" by D.C. Waldorf. Then later he met D.C. in 1990 when he was there in East Wenatchee with the Buffallo Museum of Science to take part in one of the digs at the Richey Clovis site, which is only a few miles from where he lives. That is when Cole’s knapping really took off. He has made several trips to Glass Buttes to quarry Obsidian, also e has networked with other flintknappers to aquire stone from all over the United States and around the world. Cole bought a rocksaw to conserve on materials as well as a kiln for heat-alteration.

Cole has held the Wenatchee knap-in since 1995. Cole is a member of Knappers-R-Us since it's beginning in 2001 and has a page on www.Flintknappers.com/cole.htm . Cole has chipped different point types found across the U.S. Cole has played with many different styles of knapping. Danish, Egyptian, Mayan Eccentrics, paralell pressure and percussion flaking and Flake over Grinding. Through the 90's his main focus was the Wenatchee style Clovis points. Cole made many and tried several different fluting techniques with pressure jigs, today it is direct percussion fluting. In the mid to late 90's Cole wanted to make larger pieces and began making the large bi-faces, his first deer dance blades. Since that time, the large Clovis points and Ceremonial blades is about 80 percent of Cole’s knapping. He has made many up to 16 or 18" and the quest for even larger blades has lured him. Finding material large enough is a quest in itself. Just in the last few years have Cole found pieces up to and beyond 24". Currently Cole is working on a pair of blades that may exceed 28”
-“Some may think using slabs is kinda cheating. I don't. Much harder to get into with all the squared edges and fragility. Not to mention getting more than one centerpiece by spalling.”- Without slabs hundreds of pounds of obsidian would be wasted, when one boulder can produce one or two giant blade on a good day, if sawn with a diamond saw these precious large pieces can yield dozens of large to giant blades. These giant blades are indeed rare and precious. With many of the lithic sources being considered for National Park status, these quarries will be off limits forever, and the time of the giant blades will end, and their value increase many times over,

Who was Ted Orcutt?



Ted Orcutt, The Karok Master, King of the Flintknappers. at the he
turn of the last century there were many flintknappers working at
their craft. One of these knappers stands out among the rest as he
carried on a sacred tradition, the white deer knapper. The White Deer
knapper had the honor of knapping the massive obsidian blades for the
world renewal ceremony known as the White Deer Dance. The White Deer
Dance was very a huge undertaking and organizers spent years planning
for one event. The event was not only time and labor intensive but
was also financially very costly. To make things work out, each tribe
took a turn hosting the event that often lasted 3 solid days. The
actual dance involved dancers carrying stuffed albino dear skins on
polls followed by obsidian dancers that carried a set of two- twin,
massive obsidian bi-faced blades tied in the middle with a buck skin
thong. He who knapped the sacred, giant, ceremonial blades for the
Karok, Hupa and Yurok was a man of honor. The man who last held this
honor was known as king of the flintknappers, he was Theodore Orcutt.
Theodore Orcutt was born February 25, 1862 near the Karok Indian
settlement of Weitchpec on the Klamath River. Weitchpec is now at the
upper or north edge of the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation in
northern California. His mother was a full blooded Karok Indian, born
at the Karok settlement of Orleans, Oleans is only a short distance
from Weitchpec on Hwy 96, his father was a Scotsman. Theodore's
father, Albert Stumes Orcutt had fair skin, blue eyes and light hair
and was about 5.11 inches tall and ran Orcutt Hydraulic on the South
fork of the Salmon River at Methodist creek, Albert came to this area
from Maine where he was carpenter, although he had been a sailor
earlier in life. Later in life Albert had a small farm and Orchard on
the Klamath River.
Theodore's mother, Panamenik -Wapu Orcutt, was closer to 5 foot 6
inches , with jet black hair, brown eyes and dark skin. His mother
had the characteristic traditional female Karok tattoo on her chin, 3
vertical strait lines. At adolescence all traditional Karok girls had
their chin tattooed with three vertical lines, or stripes. Using a
sharp obsidian tool, soot and grease were stitched into the skin, the
same tattoo was on the biceps. The tattooing was for several purposes
all relating to gender and Klan affiliation. She was considered a
good cook and hard worker, she could make baskets, new the ins and
outs of herbalism and acted on occasion as a midwife. She also spoke
both the Hokan language and English. Theodore's mother stayed close
to him all his life and even in old age she made trips to visit with
him. His mother lived to the advance age of 107 years old.
In about 1865 young Theodore was given his Indian name, "Mus-su-peta-
nac" translated to English means "Up-River-Boy", Karok traditional
names were not given for several years after birth so if the child
died at a young age they would not be remembered by name and the
grieving would be less. The infant mortality rate for Karok in the
late 1800s was not good, at the Federal census of 1910 there were
only 775 Karoks living in 200 Karok homes.
As a child, Theodore road his pony to the local one room school house
and was a quite and good student. He was a quit boy and a very good
writer, had excellent penmanship and was well read, he was, however
largely self taught, because of his many other obligations. He helped
around the house and was diligent in his chores. While the country
was celebrating its first centennial, 1876, Ted was 14 years old and
had begun his flintknapping apprenticeship with his Karok uncle "Mus-
sey-pev-ue-fich" , his mother's brother, whom was a master
flintknapper and was considered the village specialist. It was a
great honor for Ted to be chosen to such a prestigious mentor (mentor-
a wise and trusted counselor) and he practiced when ever he could.
The raw material of choice for stone workers in northern California
at the time was obsidian. Obsidian is a volcanic, colored glass,
usually black, which displays curved lustrous surfaces when
fractured. According to Carol Howe (1979) "the amount of control that
a skilled workman can exercise over obsidian is amazing. Teodore
Orcutt, a Karok Indian, one lived at Red Rock near Dorris,
California. He learned the arrowhead maker's art from his father, who
was the village specialist. The giant blade in figure 1, now in the
Nevada Historical Museum at Reno, Nevada, is an example of his work,
though not ancient, it represents the almost lost hertage of an
ancient art. Orcutt told Alfred Collier of Klamath Falls that it took
years of practice for him to became proficient."
While still in his teens he began to master the art of flintknapping.
First he learned the percussion method of knapping (Percussion method-
the act of creating some implements by controlled impact flake
detachment) and after several years he could reduce a fairly large
mass of obsidian into a flat plate like biface (biface-a large spear
head shaped blank with flake scars covering both faces), he was also
becoming more adapt to the pressure flaking techniques with a hand
held antler tine compressor (Pressure flaking- a process of forming
and sharpening stone by removing surplus material with pushing
pressure- in the form of flakes using an antler tine). His
arrowheads, spear points and other flint work became quite nice and
he began to experiment with eccentric forms and often knapped
butterfly, dog, eagles and other zoomorphic (zoomorphic-abstract
animal shaped art) and anthropomorphic (anthropomorphic-abstract
human shaped art) forms out of fine quality, fancy obsidians provided
to him by his uncle. He was also in his teens when he learned the art
of bead weaver, brain tanning of hides and arrowsmithing.
In 1885, Ted was 23 years old and spend nearly all his time after
work flintknapping and crafting traditional Karok items. It was at
this age that one morning Ted's uncle told him to get his bed roll as
he was now ready to participate in the sacred act of collecting
lithic material. This was an honor that Ted had looked forward to for
many years and he was very excited. Ted ran back to tell his mother
but she was already standing outside with Ted's bed role and some
food she had prepared.
Not only the obsidian collecting was important but the
cerimonialism involved in doing so as well. Obsidian mining was
something that had been done by hundreds of generations of Karok and
it was not to be taken lightly. Before white mining laws came about,
Native Americans relied on the concept of "neutral ground", even
tribes which were bitter enemies could meet at the obsidian quarries
and share knapping and lithic information.
As their buckboard wagon arrived at the obsidian outcrop, Ted jumped
out of his seat down into the dark damp soil, his boots leaving
imprints in the half dried mud, it was early spring and the grass was
vibrant green. Black obsidian chips glistened and sparkled all over
the land scape. When Mus-su-petafich showed young Ted how to mine and
quarry obsidian he first left an offering of tobacco, when he
performed lithic reduction (lithic-greek for stone, term most often
used in science, reduction-the miners often made preformed artifact
blanks to lessen the bulk for transport) Mus-su-petafich drove the
obsidian flakes off the core with a soft hammer stone. Large blocks
of obsidian were quarried by splitting them off giant boulders with
the use of fire. Mus-su-petafich would build a bon fire against the
rock. As each flake came off, no matter what the method of
extraction, he would set it in a pile and categorized them as his
ancestors had and said "this one is for war, this one is for bear,
this one is for deer hunting, this one is for trade, this one is for
sale". The various piles were kept separate until they were knapped
to completion and were all set aside for their original purpose. Mus-
su-petafich told Ted why each flake (or spall) had a special purpose
based on its form, structure, fracture-ability, texture, hardness and
color. There was a different Karok word for each type and variability
in the obsidian. Red obsidian was considered ritually poison and
these were usually saved for war or revenge, at this time in history
many of the customs had changed and Mus-su-petchafich made beautiful
points for sale and trade with varieties of obsidian that were once
reserved for the kill. There were numerous instances when Mus-su-
petchafich had to obtain subsurface, unweathered material, but these
were for the most part small pit mines.
It took Ted many years of mentoring with his uncle before he began to
fully understand the Karok lithic tradition. The two men made
thousands of arrowheads, lithic art and traditional Karok costumes
and marketed them, not only to traditional Indians but also, to a
wealthy eastern clientele. As Ted got older flintknapping became an
obsession, nearly all his extra time was spent either collecting
extravagant lithic material or flintknapping, in bad whether and at
night he would plan his strategy for some lithic challenge he was
working on and his quest for every better lithic material began
taking him farther and farther from home. Oregon's Glass buttes,
Goose Lake, Blue Mt., in Northern California, Battle Mountain
Chalcedony in Nevada Opal, agate and jasper from the coastal areas
and the inland deserts. On several occasions Ted Orcutt made trips to
Wyoming, the Dakotas and many locations in Utah and Idaho where he
would find specific lithic materials for special orders. Herb Wynet
was Orcutt's traveling partner and "sidekick" on many of these trips
and Herb would do all the driving so his friend "Theo" could gaze out
the car window at the country-side. Ted could look at the geology and
topography of an area if he had been there before or not and give a
good prediction, with great accuracy, where the lithic material would
be, he was correct nearly every time. On these trips Orcutt kept a
list of artifact orders on hand, this way he knew what lithic
material to get and what to focus on at his afternoon knapping
sessions on the road. In this manor Ted never fell behind on his
orders while on his flint hunting adventures. In 1902 Ted moved to
Red Rock Valley near Mount Hebron he was now 40 years old and his
percussion biface knapping was becoming better than ever. In the
earlier years Ted and his uncle had made I name for themselves among
the Native Americans in their area by knapping the large White Dear
Dance ceremonial blades for the White Deer Dance Rituals, Ted was now
challenged by these massive blades and he had a compulsive need to go
ever larger and more spectacular using many varieties of flint and
obsidian to make ever more elaborate pieces. By 1905, at age 43
Orcutt was knapping hundreds of obsidian blades of massive size, his
command over the percussion method of knapping was now unrepressed in
the history of the world.
In 1911 Ted was 49 years old when he got the job of postmaster of the
Tecnor post office in Red Rock. It was August of the same year that
Ted sat on the wooden bench outside his house and read about Ishi in
the local newspaper, the whole thing with Ishi took place only a few
miles from Ted's house, curiously, the Hokan language family
encompasses both Yahi (Ishi's language) and Karok (Orcutt's
language). It was a local joke to Ted people would say "hey Theo, did
you hear Mr. Ishi is the last arrow head maker!"
Ted was self-educated, read a good deal and by all accounts wrote a
good hand. The job as postmaster was taxing and left little idle time
to knap stone so in 1926, at the age of 62, he gave up the postmaster
job and began hauling mail from Mt. Hebron, at Technor, in Red Rock
Valley, first with horse and buggy and later in a Model T Ford, which
Ted bought new. During this time Orcutt was knapping more than ever
and was selling items through out the eastern United States, Europe
and Museums through out the world. He had well received exhibitions
at the California State Fair in Sacramento, a permanent display in
the Memorial Flower Shop in Woodland, California and he had shipped
his points to many hundreds of museums and collectors. He had a claim
where he mined obsidian near Wagontire, Eastern Oregon. It was in
this period also that Ted's ceremonial blades went from the 30 inch
long giants to the 48 inch long monsters that made gave him the
title "king of the flintknappers". This same time period Ted took a
half ton block of glass Mountain obsidian and carefully and precisely
knapped a 48 1/2 inch long ceremonial knife, which was 9 inches wide
and only 1-3/4 inch thick. This massive bifaced blade still hold the
world record for size, it rests in the Smithsonian Institute, a
similar one is in the Nevada Historical Museum at Reno, Nevada. In
the Natural History museum in Sacramento there is a massive
collection of large Orcutt blades, 176 in all, they are in an old box
marked "source unknown". The Southwest Museum in Los Angeles has many
Orcutt blades and also some of the White Deer Dance costumes Ted
made. As for the 48 inch blade, one witness to the giant blade
manufacture heard Ted speak really softly while working on the giant
blade, " I get awful nervous when I'm working on this, I'm afraid
I'll break it just before I finish." The International Flintknappers ‘ Hall of Fame and Museum is encouraging individuals of all ages to “Be A Superior Example,” through a new education program as part of a new curriculum to promote healthy habits, while encouraging everyone to live free of drugs and other such substances or vices. It serves as the central point for the study of the history of flintknapping in the United States and beyond, displays flintknapping-related artifacts and exhibits, and honors those who have excelled in the craft, research/ writing, promoting events, and serving the knapping community in an ethical manner.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

JIM SPEARS, HALL OF FAME FLINTKNAPPER # 5

Jim Spears, the knapper








I have actually never met Jim Spears, but he is one of my favorite knappers. He was mentioned in the Waldorf book, The Art Of Flintknapping, but was sort of a phantom, not caring much for the publishing and so on. To me he was sort of a mystery. Jim Spears met Waldorf in the parking lot of a black powder shoot one day and they hit it off right away, this was when knappers were as rare as hen's teeth. Jim's lithic masterpieces were created in the traditional billet knapping methodology and were prized by collectors of the genera world over. He knapped in the Sollutrean style, at least from what I have seen on film. He has undoubtedly influenced dozens, if not hundreds of knappers. It is difficult to separate the influence of Spears and Waldorf on the knapping world, they are sort of attached at the hip in some respects.

Jim Spears, the knapper that pioneered modern theory of isolated
platforms for large Cado blade thinning, was born September 5th,
1942, and had been interested in artifacts and stone tools all of his
life. . When Jim got out of the Navy he inquired around about
knapping and eventually saw a man using a beer can, or bear bottle
opener to pressure flake the edges of spalls, it was a twisting
motion. This discovery fascinated Jim, but before long he discovered
that a deer antler and dolomite hammerstones were the way to go. Jim
moved to Noel in 1965 and made his first flint point around 1966, he
has made over ten thousand points since. When Jim would get off work
at a trailer making company, he would go out in the woods and knapp.
After many years and many tons of flint he became one of the best
flintknappers of all time, his large, thin, patterned percussion
blades of colorful flint are masterful and each is a work of
art. "Jim pieces" as they are affectionately called by collectors,
fetch a handsome price. The largest noviculite point ever made was
a `Jim peace" and was 20 inches long, and was unheated. Thanks, I will ad this to the web site, thank you. I started knapping in 1969. I was 9 lol. I have been knapping ever since. I am also a fan of other knappers. I did my 1sy newsletter in 1984 and it evntually was given to Val Waldorf and it became "CHIPS" now I am doing flintknapping Blogging, Jim has always been one of my favorites, since I read about him in Waldorf's book. Good evening, Ray, Still haven’t fixed obsidian preform page .. BUT I HAVE been working all day on a bunch of Jim’s points, photographing and developing listings & COA’s for Jim to sign so I can put his points on eBay. The last 4-5 years, I just couldn’t keep up while caring for Mom, too. But now hope to make some money for Jim. Thank you for the link about Jim. He’s my best friend for so many years now, a precious, honorable man and individual to all who know him apart from his phenomenal knapping skills. There’s so many little stories, funny fun things, I will hold forever in my heart… He is how come Missouri Trading Company went from being a hobby tool business to a flintknapping biz. He taught me to knap because I wanted to (ONLY) know how to make a quick weapon or tool for survival in the woods. He kept giving me his rock to destroy so I told him I wanted to find my own. Where could I do that? (thinking a local stream or cave or something.) He said that the rock I liked the best (of his) came from Texas and I should go to Texas. Eh,..Okay. Where? So he told me where, who to see, etc, gave me a 15 minute dissertation on rock checking, patted me on head and said see ya. Five days later after 1500 miles of driving and one major breakdown, I came home with about 800 pounds of stone, mostly knappable. Decided it really wasn’t for me so ran an ad in paper to get rid of the stuff – boy, that got me into it deeper! 14 years later, still growing and selling more and more. That 800 pounds of stone has turned into ??tons. Three crude lead filled boppers have turned into around 35 knapping tools and many accessories that I have developed with help and contributions of others. All the while, Jim has been here, encouraging me, nudging me, critiquing, testing, teaching, me. We are both traders by nature so we understand each other. If it weren’t for him (and others, too) this business would not be anything like it is today. It’s mine but I feel like I’m just along for the ride! If you look in John Whittaker’s book, American Flintknappers, he has a diagram of the learning paths of what I call, the grand daddies of flintknapping. Jim was an originator. Gotta git to work .. sorry for the ramble..Thanks again for the link, will show it to Jim. He may not even know about it. Diana THE A-HED October 6, 2005 . Arrowhead Case: Knapping Hits a Spot For Flint-Stone Fans Manly Types Get a Crush On a Prehistoric Craft; Mr. Spears as 'Rock' Star. Article By GAUTAM NAIK | Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL "NOEL, Mo. -- Seated on a low bench, Jim Spears used a piece of deer horn to whittle down a heavy chunk of Missouri flint. For an hour, he tapped, whacked and smoothed the hard rock until it was transformed into a delicate and potentially deadly artifact: a replica of an Indian arrowhead known as a Dalton point. "Every stone is different and every stone is a challenge," said Mr. Spears, as he chiseled away and the arrowhead grew thinner and sharper. "It helps me get into the minds of ancient people." At 62 years old, Mr. Spears is one of the country's finest flint knappers, a breed of die-hards who re-create ancient arrowheads, knives and tools using original Stone Age techniques. . More than 10,000 years ago, prehistoric Americans attached sharpened stone "points" to spears and hunted woolly mammoths. In the 1960s and 1970s, a handful of archeologists made basic, often clumsy arrowheads in order to better understand ancient tool making. Since then, knapping has taken off as a surprisingly popular American pastime and art form. Hundreds of modern-day Stone Agers now gather at weekend "knap-ins," where they chip rock, swap techniques and trade arrowheads. Novices eager to learn the skill pay $500 or more to attend workshops. Dozens of books and videos -- including one called "Caught Knapping" -- tout the craft. A glossy magazine for knapping devotees, Modern Lithic Artists Journal, launched last year and featured Mr. Spears's work in the first issue. Another quarterly bible of the trade is called Chips. "It's a manly hobby, because of its association with hunting and weapons," says John Whittaker, an archeologist-knapper at Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa. Indeed, some knappers make practical use of their handiwork, hunting deer and other creatures with the carefully honed points. Prof. Whittaker estimates that there are at least 5,000 knappers in the U.S., mostly men, who churn out 1.5 million pieces a year. Replica arrowheads sell on the Internet for $10 to $100 or more apiece, and are increasingly turning up on eBay. One 5-inch "turkey tail" arrowhead, for instance, recently sold for $202.50 at the site, even though its pedigree was unclear. (The seller said it "looks old.") Old-time knappers worry about commercialization of their craft. That's because the best knappers have become so skilled that their work can be difficult to distinguish from Stone Age objects. Some archeologists fret that modern arrowheads are more likely now than in the past to be sold as originals, muddying the historical record. Other purists, such as Errett Callahan, who runs workshops on the traditional approach in Lynchburg, Va., contend that some of today's "wild, modernistic" designs make a mockery of an ancient skill. While newer hobbyists sometimes rely on copper implements -- which most Stone Age people never had -- Mr. Spears insists on doing things the old, old way. A resident of Noel, Mo., he has knapped steadily for four decades. He gathers flint near his home in the Ozarks. He only uses tools available to prehistoric Americans, including bison rib and deer horn, which he obtains from hunts or at a butcher's shop. Even with these crude implements, arrowheads can be carved to be sharper than surgical scalpels. When practicing his craft, Mr. Spears folds a piece of buckskin over his left leg and uses his thigh as an anvil. He holds the stone in his left hand and hits it with a piece of animal horn known as a billet. By delicately adjusting the pressure of his fingers under the rock, he is able to channel the force of the blow along natural lines in the stone, knocking off flakes exactly where he wants. A single wrong strike can ruin a piece. But Mr. Spears intimately understands the physics of percussion. "He can do things to a rock that are miraculous," says Bob "BigFlint" Hunt, a knapper from Oak Grove, Mo., who has known Mr. Spears for more than two decades. Another colleague recalls that at a small 1993 gathering, everyone dropped their tools to watch Mr. Spears chisel a complicated turkey tail arrowhead. After spending four years in the Navy, Mr. Spears did a brief stint at junior college. While there, he saw a friend craft an arrowhead by flaking a piece of flint with a beer opener. In a book for Boy Scouts, Mr. Spears read that prehistoric Americans had used deer horn to chisel points; he decided to do the same. "I was enthralled by the idea," he says. "I began to chip all the time." Jim Spears knaps a piece of raw Missouri flint into a Dalton point arrowhead. . One day, as he crouched on a rocky bluff hitting a stone, a man pulled over in his car and shouted: "Hey, what you doing there?" "Making arrowheads," Mr. Spears answered back. The man paused, then shook his head and drove off. "Guess he thought I was nuts," says the knapper. Over the years, Mr. Spears taught himself to knap increasingly intricate designs such as the exquisitely fluted "Folsom point." Eventually, his lifestyle began to reflect his obsession. He took to hunting deer with a bow and arrow. He sometimes sat around a fire and skinned carcasses with stone implements he had made. Mr. Spears's large house in the middle of the Ozark hills is bare, except for a few Indian rugs and a mattress on the floor. Though he has an old telephone -- which he's been known to unplug -- he doesn't own a wristwatch. In one room he stores 40 large pieces of bamboo, from which he carves bows and arrows. He has never married. His longtime girlfriend, who is part Native American, lives several miles away. It's hard to make a living from knapping alone. Mr. Spears, who used to dabble in construction work before taking up his craft full-time, says the Internet has lately damped his arrowhead sales. So he also trades other Native American products through a friend, Diana Benson. Her mail-order knapping supply firm sells Mr. Spears's arrowheads, as well as rugs and baskets, on the Internet. The shelves of her Missouri Trading Company store, in Pineville, Mo., are heaped with rocks, tools and about 30 instructional video titles -- including one starring Mr. Spears. Mr. Spears attends about four knap-ins each year. One recent weekend, he stowed his tools and workbench in his pickup, and drove 250 miles north to the Fort Osage knap-in, held in a field in northern Missouri. Along the way, he snacked on dried fruits and deer jerky made from an animal he had killed. At the event, more than 100 knappers from Iowa, Illinois, Texas and elsewhere, sat in circles and, for hours, whacked away at rocks. Most were middle-aged men -- carpenters, jewelry makers and at least one professional archaeologist. At one tent, a vendor from Leavenworth, Ind., hawked 1,800 pounds of stone, including jasper and chert. Another attendee described how he felled a deer using an arrow tipped with a stone point. Mr. Spears didn't even take out his tools. Fellow knappers said they were already in awe of his skill and that he had little to prove anymore. When one collector proudly noted that certain arrowheads could fetch hefty prices, Mr. Spears was bemused. "When you get right down to it," he said, "it's nothing but rocks." "
The International Flintknappers ‘ Hall of Fame and Museum is encouraging individuals of all ages to “Be A Superior Example,” through a new education program as part of a new curriculum to promote healthy habits, while encouraging everyone to live free of drugs and other such substances or vices. It serves as the central point for the study of the history of flintknapping in the United States and beyond, displays flintknapping-related artifacts and exhibits, and honors those who have excelled in the craft, research/ writing, promoting events, and serving the knapping community in an ethical and wilderness loving manner.