Add this love of mine with my child's love to constantly be out of doors and you have a natural winner of a day.
It's not that I taught him to pick out these pottery pieces in the midst of thousands of bits of shells and rocks, but he, in all his toddler eagerness to help, is all too happy to sort through the jumble under our feet. He uncannily knows what I am looking for. While he may not get me the prized blue and white pottery pieces that I look for, he does pick out quite a handful of gorgeous all-white pieces for me to sort through. I'm not saying my kid is a genius, but for someone that goes into a hourly state of near ecstasy when he finds a good rock, I'd say this is an impressive eye for sorting good shards from the rest of the litter for a wee one.The legend of this pottery, found everywhere and everyday on Hayama Beach and parts of Kamakura beaches, is that sea vessels long ago ship wrecked in the area found their pottery sunken with them. The pieces have taken hundred of years rolling along the depths until they have washed up, perfectly weather, on today's sandy shores. It's a good story, but I'm not sure I am a believer. I'm thinking maybe the housewives who accidentally break a piece of china here or there, take it down to the cliffs and toss it over just so they don't have to do yet another sorted bag in that week's recyclables. I kid. Kind of. Whatever the reason for its appearance, I'm just so very glad it does. And so is Peanut.



2 comments:
Too cute! I'd like to see some photos of sea pottery :)
It's in a box on a boat somewhere on the Pacific right now. Will have to get to that in the future.
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