Years ago, I wrote this to a friend,
"I admit that at this time of year I long for scents. Natural scents, and not fake candle/weird pot pourri, sickeningly headache inducing air freshener scents, but real ones.
Pine I can get, and the quince is lovely, and I dry my own roses, but in centrally heated homes, they need a boost. So, I went looking for Port Orford Cedar shavings, and instead I found a fellow in Inverness offering spoon blanks and the like. I contacted him and he has offered me real cedar, of Lebanon, Port Orford, and 250 year old Caledonian Pine shavings too

I know I'm not the only one looking for natural scents this time of year, and I know fine that an awful lot of folks have no access to timbers for spoon carving and the like.
The shavings arrived today, and the house smells wonderful
I could smell them even through three layers of plastic wrapping 
My own preference is for the Port Orford cedar, but they're all really good. The pine is so right for just now."
Well, it's that time of year again. It's cold and wet and windy outside, and I love those scents of fresh cut timbers, resins and the like in my home.
I really, really don't like fake headache inducing artificial ones.
The fellow in Inverness no longer sells Port Orford cedar though, and he never did sell the pieces of the bark that somehow seem richer in scent.
However, I know that Port Orford cedar was planted in the south for a while, Norfolk and the like, and it thrived there. I know that archers like the shafts made from it, but I have no connections to anyone working with it from the raw.
What else has a smell that's lovely in the house ? The bog myrtle, the sweet gale, is very good, and I grow it to put into my bowls of dried stuffs, but there must be other native plants that we can use ? Lady's bedstraw is very good, but it's not robust enough to give that faint background scent in a centrally heated home. It's fine as a strewing herb.
Any ideas ? and does anyone have Port Orford cedar growing ?
M
"I admit that at this time of year I long for scents. Natural scents, and not fake candle/weird pot pourri, sickeningly headache inducing air freshener scents, but real ones.
Pine I can get, and the quince is lovely, and I dry my own roses, but in centrally heated homes, they need a boost. So, I went looking for Port Orford Cedar shavings, and instead I found a fellow in Inverness offering spoon blanks and the like. I contacted him and he has offered me real cedar, of Lebanon, Port Orford, and 250 year old Caledonian Pine shavings too
I know I'm not the only one looking for natural scents this time of year, and I know fine that an awful lot of folks have no access to timbers for spoon carving and the like.
The shavings arrived today, and the house smells wonderful
My own preference is for the Port Orford cedar, but they're all really good. The pine is so right for just now."
Well, it's that time of year again. It's cold and wet and windy outside, and I love those scents of fresh cut timbers, resins and the like in my home.
I really, really don't like fake headache inducing artificial ones.
The fellow in Inverness no longer sells Port Orford cedar though, and he never did sell the pieces of the bark that somehow seem richer in scent.
However, I know that Port Orford cedar was planted in the south for a while, Norfolk and the like, and it thrived there. I know that archers like the shafts made from it, but I have no connections to anyone working with it from the raw.
What else has a smell that's lovely in the house ? The bog myrtle, the sweet gale, is very good, and I grow it to put into my bowls of dried stuffs, but there must be other native plants that we can use ? Lady's bedstraw is very good, but it's not robust enough to give that faint background scent in a centrally heated home. It's fine as a strewing herb.
Any ideas ? and does anyone have Port Orford cedar growing ?
M
