Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 45

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 45
EXPLOITATION OF WILD BIRDS IN ICELAND FROM THE SETTLEMENT PERIOD TO THE 19TH CENTURY AND ITS REFLECTION IN ARCHAEOLOGY Nesting and nesting sites of the Eider duck The nesting sites of Eider ducks are always very close to the shoreline of Iceland or its smaller islands (Hilmarsson 2000, 92). Before the ducks arrived in spring many farmers made sure the nesting sites were well prepared for their arrival. An old tradition was to cover the site with hay, grass or seaweed, especially in gravelly landscape, as that supposedly attracted birds to nest (Jónasson 1945, 200; Ólafsson and Pálsson 1981,128-129; Berglund 2009, 122). Some farmers built stone shelters for the ducks with flagstones while others made semicircles with raised turf strips, or dug small holes for the ducks to sit in (table 1). Stone shelters were built e.g. at Vigur in the Westfjords in the 1770s and turf protected nests in Hvalseyjar in Faxaflói (Kristjánsson 1986, 290; Berglund 2009, 122). The nesting season usually lasts from the beginning of May to the middle or late June (Hilmarsson 2000, 92) and in the 18th and 19th centuries at least, down was partially collected at least two or three times during incubation and then after the birds had left with their chicks (Jónasson 1945, 200; von Troil 1961, 84; Horrebow 1966, 131; Kristjánsson 1986, 299-301). Down cleaning Cleaning down was a messy flea-ridden job that was done outside or in outhouses such as hay bams or cow sheds (Sigurðardóttir 1985, 407 and 411; Kristjánsson 1986, 305 and 308). No descriptions of how eiderdown was cleaned in medieval times have been found but the oldest method is thought to be cold cleaning (Ólafsson and Pálsson 1981, 322-324; Kristjánsson 1986, 304). During cold cleaning, down was simply dried outside in the sun and all extraneous materials like seaweed, eggshells, grass and dirt were picked out by hand. This was a difficult and time consuming task but it produced higher yields and better down, so it fetched a higher price. According to Kristjánsson (1986, 302-304) down harps came to Iceland in the beginning of the 17th century, possibly ffotn England, and around the same time people started baking down in large pots for cleaning. The original harp is thought to have been made of bilge hoops fitted with a few hemp strings (von Troil 1961, 85). Later the harps were (and still are) made of wood and strings. Short pins of wood or whalebone, whittled at the ends to a chisel-like edge, are used along with the harp (hrœlar and fantar) to pluck the strings of the harp when the down is on top of it. That way the down adheres to the strings while dirt and grit falls through to the floor (table 1). When down was baked it was sometimes beaten with a stick afterwards and the waste would crumble out of it, but that was rarely good for the down yield and lowered the price. After baking, down was usually processed on the harp in the same way as sun baked down but while it was still hot (Jónasson 1945, 200-201; Kristjánsson 1986, 302-308; Jónsson ed. 2001, 109-113; Berglund 2009, 122-124). According to The Icelandic Historical Statistics (Jónsson and Magnússon eds. 1997, 416-429) no detailed information about the export of eiderdown is recorded until after 1733 but most likely down had been exported for a 43
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