I have been spinning the challenging pewter merino. It is in Top, yet the fibers are exceedingly short! So, it is slow and frustrating going. I will be much more careful of what I purchase from now on! Three spinners have urged me to return the product!
It has taken most of the enjoyment out of spinning. To get through, I am listening to 'The Lovely Bones' read by the author as I spin.
Finally plied half of this fiber into what is an inviting yarn! Surprise! Worth all the effort! Yes, that is a local Widow-Maker near to my entry. I still haven't decided whether to weave it or knit, and then, which texture? It will be a neck scarf for a man.
When this is finished, I will spin COLOR! Ixchel Bunny's colorways of merino and angora.
In the past, I mentioned there should be rights of passage for spinners and knitters.
Say, when one finishes the first wearable out of one's own handspun yarn.
Or, when one finishes their first lace project, successfully!
Will I ever get there?
I have woven a top, and worn it, knitted things and worn them. Made knitted things for others out of my own homespun, yet, have still to make myself something from my own homespun!It may seem like a small challenge, but it will be my fiber challenge this year!
Now in the possession of a drum carder designed for the fine alpaca and angora I choose to work with, this may lead to the next step forward, an old dream of selling fine products for spinners!
Will my neck and shoulder injuries allow this? Learning to accept and live in a certain degree of pain and restriction, to suffer for my fiber desires, is becoming a way of life. How will I ever pull the beater on the loom, LO!?
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Giants in The Earth Winter!
Evidence of Abundance! White, sparkly abundance, that is.
We are having a Giants in The Earth Winter. Rolvaag wrote my favorite book.
A Pioneer decides he can make one last trip to town for supplies before winter sets in.
He sets out, walking, as there are no indications of severe weather.
It begins to snow on his way home. This snow quickly becomes an intense blizzard!
He struggles on! He cannot see, yet he manages to go directly towards the remote cabin where his wife is. He dies in a snowbank. Later in the spring he is found, not far from his door!
This is the type of Blizzard we had this week in the Hilltowns!
I drove home into the hills with wet snow pelting into the headlights.
These flakes had to be 1/4 to 1/2 inch, each!
The real fun was in the anticipation of this storm. Some sources simply said snow starting Wednesday afternoon, continuing into Thursday. Some sources said 6 to 12 inches. Some said 4 to 6 inches, and yet others said 12 to 16 inches would come. We did not know what to expect!
We did get app. 8 inches of heavy, wet snow! All on top of the 2 1/2 to 3 feet of white from recent storms. It looks like the interior of a mansion when the family goes away. White sheets are pulled over the furniture!
Much like in this photo of one of the four foot high stone walls.
Yet all this is nothing compared to a story I was told when I lived in Mt. Storm, West Virginia.
A.B. Cosner, one of the influential old-timers, told me of a winter when the snow was so high, they dug a tunnel through it to cross the road. He showed me a picture on the wall of the Restaurant. This was no simple tunnel! Adults were standing straight up in it, and it was wide enough for several people!
We are having a Giants in The Earth Winter. Rolvaag wrote my favorite book.
A Pioneer decides he can make one last trip to town for supplies before winter sets in.
He sets out, walking, as there are no indications of severe weather.
It begins to snow on his way home. This snow quickly becomes an intense blizzard!
He struggles on! He cannot see, yet he manages to go directly towards the remote cabin where his wife is. He dies in a snowbank. Later in the spring he is found, not far from his door!
This is the type of Blizzard we had this week in the Hilltowns!
I drove home into the hills with wet snow pelting into the headlights.
These flakes had to be 1/4 to 1/2 inch, each!
The real fun was in the anticipation of this storm. Some sources simply said snow starting Wednesday afternoon, continuing into Thursday. Some sources said 6 to 12 inches. Some said 4 to 6 inches, and yet others said 12 to 16 inches would come. We did not know what to expect!
We did get app. 8 inches of heavy, wet snow! All on top of the 2 1/2 to 3 feet of white from recent storms. It looks like the interior of a mansion when the family goes away. White sheets are pulled over the furniture!
Much like in this photo of one of the four foot high stone walls.
Yet all this is nothing compared to a story I was told when I lived in Mt. Storm, West Virginia.
Drift laying against the Carriage House |
An evening before one of our snow storms. |
Labels:
Blizzards,
Giants In The Earth,
Mt. Storm,
Snow Tunnels,
W. Va.,
winter
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Neighbors
Hello to you from Grass Hill Alpacas. These animals are very friendly. |
I have immersed myself in alpaca fiber, and Alpacas!
I am acquainted with the folks at North East Alpacas in Whately, MA.
Each Thanksgiving Weekend, they have open house. Open it is. You can be with the animals in the pen. Through the years, I have bought many fleeces from them.
Here I am discussing the weather with one fine animal! I would love to have this fleece this spring!
When they began, they were into white fleece. I am overjoyed they have many fine color fleece now. There is nothing like a cool, soft, fine color fleece of Alpaca.
My friends talk about rolling in it!
Recently I finished washing some fine black. Now I am washing Taylor, whose fleece is white to apricot toned, and of very long staple
Friday, September 10, 2010
Memories of Blue
I remember BLUE, an abundance of blue! From the age of four, I remember!
Da knew where all the Wild Highbush Blueberries were! Our entire family would walk old rutty, hidden roads, or windy deer paths to patches of these flavorful orbs.
Lake Jones was a favorite destination. We would conceal where we were heading as best we could.
Out behind the sand pile, the old road, to another barely perceptible old road, not even a dirt road.
We carried our pails, and walked silently for a while. through swampy areas, dragonflies, deerflies, dusty areas.
when we reached the edge of the lake where there was a knot of trees, with large rocks, the smell of warm grass, and sweet fern delighted me. I love Sweet Fern!
Da motioned for silence and to stop. He waited a minute, then selected me, gave the 'walk silent' sign, and I followed close behind his tall legs. We crossed the open grass, tall grass, so tall for my wee four years, I couldn't see past Da's legs. Near to the stand of blueberry bushes, he stepped aside.
There, a few inches in front of me, grass was down in a tangle, larger than me! Da told me to put my hands into it. It was warm! Very warm! He explained that three doe and two fawn had just left. This was where they had slept last night. I felt such Honor!
Da called for the others. He led me to a spot under the edges of four bushes, gave me three pails, told me to sit there. I sat there and picked without having to move to another spot. Looking up, all I could see was blue and green! My family all about me, but out of sight in the bushes, the sound of plunk, plunk, ehoing back to me.
Da had tall pails, with metal handles. He would loop his belt through the handles of six pails.
With two pails directly in front of him, he gently pulled handfuls of sweetness into them. When they were full, he would move them over, pull the other two to the front, and continue.
The walk back was a concentration on counting each step, to distract from the pain of the heavy pail handles pulling at the base of my small fingers. Crows called from the overhead branches when we reached the shaded treed sections of the old road.
Later, at home, the blueberries were gently rinsed.
My mother's bed faced two windows, each letting in lots of sunlight. Towels were laid out on the bed.
We lazily rolled the blueberries dry, removing any stems or undeveloped ones.
Blueberries were placed into containers and delivered to neighbors that had requested them.
Mom would take a quantity to Hugo's store across the street, trade them for flour and sugar.
Soon we were eating her wonderful blueberry pies and muffins!
(Mom had been a private chef for a wealthy family)
All these years, I desired to have my own blueberry farm, organic highbush!
I live in the hills now, only a few miles from a pick-your-own, organic, berry farm!
Recently, my friend/neighbor Michelle and I visisted this farm. It was a sin to walk away and leave so many blueberries behind.
Delia, Michelle
Michelle makes delicious blueberry jam. We had a great time, tasting and picking, tasting and picking, laughing, and enjoying the other pickers. We each picked four quarts. I froze three for the white time.
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
When the past folds into the present!
OH JOY! Wonders of the universe have allowed reconnections with ladies from my elementary school years, the village!
We gathered at a restaurant, were quite a raucous crew! The excitement was wonderful!
Denise, Mary, Barbara, Delia
Seeing familiar faces, recognizeable faces, long-wished for faces is exhilerating!
Photos were passed around, by several of us at the same time! Conversations started new conversations! Photos were taken by the dozens!
We want to stay in touch! Imagine!?
"Time it was, time it was, oh what a time it was...preserve your memories, there all that is left you."
We want to stay in touch! Imagine!?
"Time it was, time it was, oh what a time it was...preserve your memories, there all that is left you."
Comments were made about the value of friends from the early formative years. Why are these so special? Perhaps, it was ventured, these were the people that accepted you as you were? We were innocent?
We talked about how we each got scattered to the downtown schools.
It is wonderful to see these people; their lives, children and grandchildren! Something about seeing them again, and those wonderful, hold-tightly hugs that make me feel complete! Soothed and excited at the same time!
Yet, it brings other memories back, also!
And, I can't help but wonder what my life might have been if we had stayed in touch.
Saturday, June 19, 2010
My Emerald Playground.
Spring Ebbs
Swords of light green new growth, up to a foot long, now blend into the lush green of the mother plants.
Trees are draped in their emerald summer gowns.
Leaves wave as I pass.
Do they remember me?
Birds sing to them in joy!
Paterned Cows lay upon the dewy, juicy grass in shaded slanting meadows.
Why isn't milk green?!
My drive to work is through a tunnel of green, so many shades of green!
White clouds come to admire the scenery.
Farmstands are open, revelling in the early production! Plants are confused.
July blooms are here. Green is interspersed with white daisy, with tiger lilly!
Nights have been very cool, days sweltering!
Behind in rainfall.
Rivers have dwindled.
The deer like it here!
You can see and feel the Chi Energy of Ferns!
There must be a Fern Deva nearby!
Ruth has a fondness for the Laurel.
It is Laurel time here in the woodlands.
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Cinnabar always sounds exotic.
Cinnabar, so exotic. As a child, I thought it was an exotic wood, possibly an aromatic like frankincense or myrrh!
Alas! it is a stone, rather, a gemstone!
Back when I wore Bellbottoms with mirrors and embroidery, I worked a bit polishing stones and cutting stained glass. This person gave me a necklace of agate. I wore it until it totally gave out! Wrapped all the pieces in a bandana and kept them for a few decades!
When I began to make jewelry again, I found the bandana. I decided to mix these with jasper, cinnabar, and onyx. Going mostly by an artist's feel for color, design, and size, I was unaware of what I was really doing!
Cinnabar is for stimulating dignity, vitality and power. It is effective in removing obstructions, furthers ones assertiveness, while eliminating aggression. It is helpful in community work. It is assistive in remembering the "giving" qualities of the Divine!
Agate for smoothing dysfunctional energies, and to both transform and eliminate negativity. It provides for perceptiveness to situations and awakens ones' inherent talents and adroitness.
Agate balances phyusical, emotional and intellectual bodies with etheric energies!
Onyx for banishing grief, enhancing self-control, and to stimulate the power of wise decision-making. Onyx to encourage happiness and good fortune!
Onyx helps one to follow the path alone, promoting the recognition of personal strengths and assisting one in understanding of the reality of the moment. It helps one become the master of ones own future!(These qualities are excerpted from the book, 'Love is in the Earth, A Kaleidoscope of Crystals, updated' by Melody) I love these books! I highly recommend them!
At this time in my life, I am accepting charcoal gray into my colors. I enjoy the delicate, oriental carving in these cinnabar beads.
I decided to keep, and wear the necklace.
Currently undergoing several 'challenges', I was amazed by how timely this choice, and how relevant these stones are! I expect their similar natures will only enhance thier qualities, powers!
Labels:
agate,
cinnabar,
gemstone necklaces,
gemstones,
Love is in the Earth,
Melody
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