Nancy: Thank's for the persimmon offer because that's another wood that I like to carve. We have quite a good stand here in western North Carolina where I've seen some of them sawing log size, and that's somewhat unusual for a persimmon tree! Raccoon's clean up the fallen fruit after the first frost each fall too as soon as they (or sometimes
before) they hit the ground.
As for the writing, well, that's something that I've alway's enjoyed about as much as carving. Since humans seem to compensate very well for their weaknesses, I guess what that means in my case is that I'm a very lousy public speaker!

Oh, well.
woodtrapper: I'm located in the northwest corner of N.C. very close to the Virginia state line in Surry County, right in some beautiful mountain country! Unfortunately, I don't make it to many carving shows

since I'm still working a very full time job and most of my time-off I presently recharge best by spending most of my time around the homeplace.
I've been carefully planning an early retirement for most of my life by working hard, investing well, and actively staying healthy so perhaps in the next 2 to 4 years (current prediction) I will have a LOT of time (like the rest of my life) on my hands to do more traveling, carving, farming, you name it. Gosh even Bob Squarebriggs has offered me an invitation to carve with his gang in New Brunswick so maybe I'll even have time for that in the near future.

Or maybe he'll let me just camp in his yard on one of my cross country bicycle trips and I can add a few woodspirits to his yard!!
As for the carving this was a very small woodspirit and was thus an easy chiseling job.
Irishman: As for the 1/3 and 2/3rd thing I think that I recall it meaning that you shouldn't carve more than 1/3 around the diameter of the tree or it can cause too much trauma to the living tree... or is that 2/3 the way around?? Perhaps Ashbys can clear this up.
Thank's everyone!