Klikov clay after firing |
Kiln floor looking towards firebox |
Chamber below chimney full of traditional Klikov ware |
Patricia Shone's adventures with wood firing ceramics, on and off the Isle of Skye. After many years of making raku fired pots and functional earthenware I built a small wood fired kiln in the garden in 2009. This is a diary of the firings. The pots can be seen on my website www.patriciashone.co.uk
Klikov clay after firing |
Kiln floor looking towards firebox |
Chamber below chimney full of traditional Klikov ware |
chimney end of kiln |
tall chimney |
I haven’t fired my kiln for a while because I spent 2 months of the summer in the lovely Czech Republic, southern Bohemia to be more precise. However it wasn’t an entirely wood fire free time. Just as we were leaving home the postie delivered the latest issue of the Log Book (www.thelogbook.net) with an article about wood fire kilns in the Czech Republic. Talk about good timing. |
Door to ware chamber, side stoke hole and fire box Martin is based in a village called Klikov, near Suchdol nad Lužnici in the east of Southern Bohemia. The village is a traditional pottery village and I saw at least 5 kiln chimneys as we drove around looking for the new kiln. (Martin still uses one of the old wood fired ‘Kessel’ kilns, after a German design from about 1850, which he renovated, see more at www.klikov.net and www.hadrava.net ). We followed smart new signs across fields to a pottery which turned out to be closed, but we got directions and eventually found some open ground just outside the village with a couple of sheds and a big chimney. No point looking for smoke, all that indicated the presence of a kiln firing in process was a heat haze at the chimney top. Amazing considering that when we arrived the kiln was already at 1260℃. |