08-08-2018 21:40 via saultstar.com

Carving out a new niche

Peter Moule learned the trade of spoon carving with plenty of practice.
“My first spoon was pretty ugly,” he said.
He took carving lessons as a child to make walking sticks; spoon-carving training was not available.
Mouse, who carves 300 to 400 spoons per year, teaches spoon carving on St. Joseph Island, charging $85 for four hours of instruction. This includes all supplies.
“There is some risk involved,” Moule told The Sault Star. “I teach practising the basic safe
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