02/17/2005

A long journey back to her roots

Marilyn Dodgen

After living 21 of her adult years in Australia, Carolyn Saul has returned to her roots in Humboldt County. She is the daughter of the late Lytton Saul, who died in 1999, and his wife, Feriba, who died in 2003. They were owners of Saul Studio (of photography) in downtown Humboldt that was started by his father, Peter Frank Saul, in 1887.

When Carolyn left Humboldt to further her education, she studied four years and graduated from Iowa State College in Ames (now Iowa State University).

She taught in Hawaii at the Kamehmeha School. This was a school for children of Hawaiian descent, established by Princess Puahi Bishop, daughter of the last Hawaiian king.

Her next teaching job was in San Francisco. She met and married an Australian, Bruce Logan, who was also a teacher. They went to Peru, in South America, to teach in a staff school for a mining company. They were there 15 years, and during that time, their son, Alan, was born.

When a political coup in the government of Peru closed down the mining company, they moved to Perth, in Western Australia. There Carolyn re-trained as a librarian and worked in the public libraries of Perth for two years. She then became employed by the Western Australian Education Department, in one of their head office libraries.

The library served as a resource for teachers in schools, as well as artists and writers in the Education Department publishing arm. Her last position with the department was in publishing, as an editor.

In 1991, she left the department to work as a freelance writer, editor and teacher. She also earned her Master's degree at the University of Western Australia.

Her first book, "The Power of the Rellard," a fantasy for middle school children, was published in 1984. It was granted the Angus & Robertson Writer For The Young Award. A novel, set in Peru, "The Huaco of the Golden God," was published two years later, followed by a sequel to Rellard, titled "Secrets of The Way."

In 1995, "River Child," a historical novel for adults set in the Swan River Colony in 1839, was published. Her four novels have been translated into Danish, Flemish, Dutch, and Italian.

In addition to novels, Carolyn has had 50 short stories published for adults and children, as well as poetry and magazine articles. She has also written and had produced two radio dramas for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, as well as several stage plays.

The play "Breast Stroke" has been produced for stage twice, in 1994 and again in 2003, and was adapted as a radio drama for ABC. It is a play on the subject of women's breast augmentation, depicting two women, one who has had breast cancer, and the other, who had the procedure done for cosmetic enhancement.

The play was written as a group effort, with Carolyn and the actors and director working together. In spite of it being a taboo subject at the time, it was produced and it was nominated for the best play of the year award in Western Australia.

Carolyn made several trips home to Humboldt during her years in Australia. On one of those trips, she gave a program at the Humboldt Public Library, telling her audience what was entailed in getting a book published.

She has received many awards over the years, and one alumni award, the Christian Petersen Design Award, came from her alma mater at Ames, while she was still living and working in Australia. They presented her with a bronze bust of Petersen, a noted sculptor who was in residence on campus when she attended the school there, as part of their award.

She works from her home, today, as an editor for a major textbook publisher in Austin, TX, and New York City, NY. She is a language editor producing text on-line books. She has her home office and keeps regular working hours.

Carolyn's son, Alan Logan, lives back in Australia with his wife, Sharon, and their four-year-old son, Cade, and one and one-half-year old daughter, Tara. He is in banking.

In 1996, she met John Rucks, a widower, who introduced her to sailing. On their first time out to sea, they were only 30 miles off the coast, but both of them were sea sick due to rough water. She eventually learned to enjoy sailing and that was good, because John had spent a good portion of his life sailing.

He was born in a suburb of Perth in 1934, and attended Christ Church grammar school. On the college level, he studied agriculture and earned a teaching degree. He then taught biology to 16 and 17-year-olds for two years.

He then returned to the University of Australia and became the senior science master at an Anglican girls college. He was the only man on staff, where he taught physics and chemistry to students who were failing their exams prior to entering university. It was his job to turn this around, and he was successful in his mission.

He also became secretary of the Science Teacher's Association.

At age 29, he joined the Royal Australian Navy as instructor and sailing master. He had a wife and two children, with a third one on the way. He became Sailing Master of each depot where he was stationed. He helped train sailors, including chiefs and petty officers, on how to handle tug boats and also how to run a 50-foot ship. John had lived on the water from the time he was a 10-years-old, when he built his first sailboat and fished from the Swan River.

The pay was not good and he had a growing family to support, so he left the Navy and moved everyone to a hog farm in Adelide, South Australia, where he taught at Putney Grammar School, an Anglican school where one of his sons also attended classes. They walked down the hill together from the hog farm to the school.

A move back to Western Australia brought him to a job with the Education Department, where he taught special science classes to mentally challenged youngsters from dysfunctional families. Among many trying situations, he had a student threaten him with a knife at that school.

While in Western Australia, he became Emergency Service Coordinator, a 40-hour a week volunteer job dealing with instructing citizens in how to deal with emergencies, that included invasion or nuclear attacks. The shire, which is comparable to our counties, had a population of 60,000 people. He received the Citizen of the Year Award, a prestigious honor, for his many hours of dedication to his job as coordinator.

As he gathered more qualifications, he went on to teach physics, chemistry and computing at the secondary level, ending up lecturing in computer programming at Cowan University. After 15 years, he left the educational field and went back to sailing.

During these years he owned five ocean-going yachts and sundry power boats (usually referred to as 'stink' boats).

This venture took him and his wife on an eight-month voyage through the Indian Ocean to the Seychelles Island, off the east coast of Africa. He had his own 34-foot sloop, Jenica, a steel sloop with one mast and no navigational equipment, which was a little small for ocean voyages.

The Jenica had no refrigeration and no automatic navigational equipment (only the sun and the stars). He steered with charts, a compass and a sextant, and had to tie himself to the rail with his belt to steady himself to use the sextant. He said he would set his clock from the BBC reading and then get a reading and go below to figure out where they were.

In 2000 miles, they saw only four vessels. It helped that he had taught navigation while in the Navy and he had the North Star to guide them only in the Northern Hemisphere.

They crossed over to SriLanka (formerly Ceylon) and bought tea; Phuket and Indonesia; ran into a hurricane, taking shelter in an atoll; passed Thailand; had to bribe a captain whose signature he needed; met a top minister in India, where there was political unrest between rebels and the government; and swam in shark-infested water.

The recent, tragic tsunami event that took so many lives the day after Christmas 2004, brought back memories of that trip around the area and the people who suffered such devastation.

He said that regardless of many tense events along the way, they did manage to arrive at the ports they were supposed to be heading towards, and did make it home to Australia. After 50 years of sailing, he was quite happy to give it up (no more sea sickness).

John and Carolyn came to the USA for a visit in 1997 and stayed. He managed an RV Park in Austin, TX, and while there, became a U.S. citizen. While living in Austin, he started a small pottery. In Australia John had developed his interest in pottery and learned all he could about a unique pottery called Agateware.

It is a pottery with a brilliant mixture of colors that result from the blending of different colored clays and integrating those colors into the green-ware at the potter's wheel. This is different from applying colored glazes to the surface of pottery. This technique originated in England or Japan, and, so far, John has not found any other potters in the USA who use the agateware process.

This could be because agateware pots have a tendency to emerge from the kiln with cracks. He says he still seems to lose the best-looking pot to cracks in the firing process.

His training in pottery was acquired through the University of Adelaide and Cowan University, both in Australia. He also had early exposure to pottery making as a youngster, when his mother developed an interest in it. It also helps that Carolyn, at one time, worked with pottery and has an interest in his work.

From 1995, when he first learned about agateware, to 1996, when he purchased his first wheel and kiln, he has continued to perfect his technique, and every piece is a challenge. He has improved his use of different clays, especially porcelain clay, which is more difficult to handle. While living in Texas, he converted a hot-house into a pottery shed and was able to have his kiln sitting outside. This is something he cannot do in Iowa.

The pieces he makes now are not only decorative, but are also useful. He makes several styles of microwave cooking pots and enjoys using them in his own kitchen. His rice pot is especially unique and practically foolproof when cooking rice in the microwave.

So far John has shown his agateware locally at a craft show at the fairgrounds, and his pieces were on display for a month at the Humboldt Public Library. He has a display of several of his pieces at The Cottage, in downtown Humboldt. He also has his work displayed on the lower level of their home, which overlooks the road to Gotch Park and the south portion of Humboldt, from the hillside in Dakota City.

Both he and Carolyn attend the Faith United Methodist Church. John is getting acquainted with his new surroundings and enjoys visiting with people. John has a quiet sense of humor and has said that he has retired here to die and has already purchased his shroud. He bought a fine black suit from Gary's Mens Wear in downtown Humboldt.

Dakota City and Humboldt are sure to benefit from their choice to return here.

 

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