Sheep Poo Paper...
Posts: 3599
  • Posted On: Jan 7 2007 7:56am
Posts: 156
  • Posted On: Jan 7 2007 7:59am
Service Unavailable


Only in Wales...
Posts: 3599
  • Posted On: Jan 7 2007 8:01am
I edited in another link, retry.

;)
Posts: 89
  • Posted On: Jan 7 2007 8:16am
Link still says "Service Unavailable".
Posts: 3599
  • Posted On: Jan 7 2007 8:31am
odd...

Works fine for me..

oh well..

I guess the delights of 'Sheep Poo Paper' is just exclusively for us in the UK then...

(don't pretend you're not jealous!)



for those who cannot see:




how its made:

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  • As every craftsperson will tell you, it all begins by using only the very finest materials. We take great care to collect super-fresh sheep poo from the beautiful
  • (and rainy) mountains of rural Wales and take it back to the mill, situated in southern Snowdonia. We don't just make Sheep Poo Paper™ and for our other papers we use waste paper, rag and textile off-cuts and just about anything else we can think of that has good length cellulose fibers in it. Of course, we don't use tree - we like trees.

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  • The sheep poo we have collected is completely sterilized by boiling it in a specially designed pressure cooker at over 120 degrees centigrade
  • (using only the purest Welsh mountain water, of course) and then washed repeatedly over a period of days until it has lost approximately half its original weight (Sheep Fact: a sheep only digests 50% of the cellulose fibers it eats).
  • The washing process produces a big pile of usable fibers and, as a by-product it also produces a clean, sterile, rich, liquid fertilizer which we store in a tank at the mill and pass on to local growers.
  • (Do you want some fertilizer? Why not contact us to ask?)
  • It takes many hours to beat the cellulose fiber and blend it with other recycled pulps until it reduces to a pulp suitable for making paper. This is a difficult process to get right and the exact method is a closely guarded secret.

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  • Using only traditional papermaking techniques we then form the pulp into sheets using special sieves
  • (called a "mould and deckle") and lay them out in stacks using felt in between each sheet to keep them from sticking together.
  • The stacked and felted sheets are then pressed under huge pressure to remove most of the remaining water and encourage the cellulose fibers to bond at a molecular scale - this is what gives the paper its strength. Hanging the paper up in the roof rafters of the mill to season them finishes off the drying process.

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  • We also make some of our paper using a very old working example of a 'Fourdrinier' continuous papermaking machine which we periodically hire from a UK papermaking museum - this machine sprays the liquid pulp onto a continuous moving mesh and the water is squeezed out between heated rollers - this gives a stunningly smooth finish, although you can still see the flecks in the paper that come from the sheep poo.
  • You don't need to have all the expensive specialist equipment we use at the mill to make a little paper at home though. Why not have a go at
  • making some paper yourself?

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Posts: 211
  • Posted On: Jan 7 2007 12:26pm
those weird welsh people...

a friend of mine bought me some sheep poo (raisins covered in chocolate)
Posts: 89
  • Posted On: Jan 7 2007 6:13pm
Looks ummm weird. Umm...yea.
Posts: 73
  • Posted On: Jan 7 2007 8:18pm
That's a bit strange, but the link did work for me.
Posts: 2558
  • Posted On: Jan 7 2007 8:26pm
Bloody Welsh! :P
Posts: 143
  • Posted On: Jan 7 2007 8:27pm
That was Irtarded! :o