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Low-Impact
Souvenir Collections
Story
and Dirt Collection by Leslie Strom
Most of us collect mementos, souvenirs
and bits of significant litter from our travels. How we enjoy
it later varies. Right now I have a French toothbrush sitting
idle in the bathroom from last year's trip to Paris, some postcards
from the Maritime museum framed on my wall, and some gorgeous
low-denomination British coins sitting affectedly in my dayrunner.
These things started as necessities and turned into souvenirs
after a bit of artistic placement. Lots of everyday things lend
themselves to collections and weirdly decorative items; some,
like antiquities, should stay where they are. If we all took
unique old bits of Europe with us, Europe would soon look like
Peoria.
Collecting manmade inorganic matter
requires ethical judgment - a friend from architecture school
collected a Robie House brick from this Frank Lloyd Wright remodel
but the brick was on the rubbish heap to be hauled away. He flaunted
it on his desk for years. Thus inspired, I carted an entire Roman
brick around in my backpack at the Roman Forum, having heisted
it without being caught. It had the neatest positive/ negative
key shape front and back that locked the bricks together, far
cooler than any 20th century hunk of Robie House. Guilt got the
best of me; it seemed criminal (and it actually WAS criminal)
to separate them after two thousand years of nesting together,
so I took a picture and put the brick back with its ancient brethren.
I suspect that even if I hadn't ended up in an Italian prison,
that keeping the brick would have cursed me like volcanic rock
from Hawaii's Kiluea
So what about
collecting bits of geography instead? I used to collect water
in film canisters. Visually it was a pretty stupid collection.
Water is water. For a while there I had water from the Firth
of Forth, the Mediterranean, the Atlantic, the Pacific, Lake
Erie, and the North Platte River. It hosted the possibility of
strange microbes and dire diseases, and it got tossed out accidentally.
So I started collecting sand. I was amazed at the subtleties
of sand from all over the world, and displayed it all in six-sided
jars. The jars were expensive and hard to find, so I eventually
ran out of them and stacked plastic bags of sand on top of the
jars. Last week I dismantled the collection because it was disgusting:
rusted lids, unidentifiable contents, rotting labels. I could
easily part with the jars, but the sand itself... well, there
was the Mount St. Helens ash I scraped off my windshield in 1980
and sand from a lovely Cape Cod week... I couldn't just dump
it.
At
a stamp and paper shop I found tiny aluminum glass-lidded tins.
They're about an inch and a quarter across, meant originally
for watchmakers' parts. I moved my sand collection (minus the
shells and rocks) to these little tins and discarded a grocery
bag full of jars and grit. Little 3/4 inch round labels on the
back finish them off. I bought enough empties for lots of future
trips, never imagining...
Our own Riverman
has a far more exotic sand collection - diamond sand from the
Skeleton Coast, red sand from the summit of Mt. Sinai, salty
sand from the shore of the Dead Sea, brown sand from the bottom
of the Grand Canyon, rocky sand from the shores of Gitchigummee,
and soon, sand from the Arctic Sea. He's gotten some new sample
jars to organize it, and soon will have a souvenir collection
Martha Stewart will envy, and I will have to try to live up to,
exotic grain by exotic grain...
Get Lost Magazine editor Leslie
Strom now has to figure out what to do with ten baggies of
tiny watch parts...
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