Monthly Archives: October 2012

Probably something you would like…

Martians at the Halloween Sock Hop: Photos of Bizarre Vintage Costumes

18 Visual Brands For U.S. Presidents. This is so great!

30 Ways to Die of Electrocution in the 1930s (via my friend Amber) These are pretty funny.

Possibly the best Tooth Fairy letters of all time

Recipe: Chicken with Morels

Recipe: Pumpkin Dream Cake

Just A Polar Bear Frolicking In A Flower Patch

I am quite smitten with this Mini Arrow Embroidery Kit.

Emergency compliment. My friend Jellen sent me this link this morning and I’ve been playing with it all day.

This made me laugh like a madman.

15 Cool Ways to Tie Your Shoelaces

Pattern: Comfy Cowl Neck Pullover. I would wear this sweater always.

What’s making you smile this week?

Misc October Pics …

Here are a few more pictures from this months Vineyard trip.

The Tabernacle and Trinity Methodist church.

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Two bikes waiting for their owners.

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Alley’s bulletin board.

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Dr Daniel Fisher house.

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Morning Glory Farm pictures…

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Breakfasts.

My creation

I think that’s it for awhile :)


Rhinebeck 2013!

Oh, I loved this ram. He was so sweet and loved to have his chin scratched. I started by kneeling in front of his pen, and scritching, then tried to leave.  Oh, no.  He shoved his head through the bars.  So I scritched some more.  Then tried to leave.  That’s when he climbed up.

A very nice lady, Jane Dixon, was watching the whole time (and I think trying not to laugh), and got this great picture.  (Yes, that is a new design I’m wearing, and no, you don’t get a better view yet!  The yarn is Dragonfly Fibers Dance rustic silk.)

Here’s a pic of him I took. He is so handsome. He nibbled on my fingers a little bit. Ever so gently. Oh, I’m in LURRRVE.

Then I fell in love with this little Shetland-with-a-pinch-of-Jacob ram (below), who fell asleep as I scritched him under the chin.  If I stopped, he just opened his eyes and gazed at me meltingly.  Oh, yes, they knew a sucker when they found one!

I chatted with his owner for awhile, and managed to scratch another of her ram’s chins (he came up and asked very nicely for me to do so — so for a time, I was scratching two chins at once).

Although there were quite a few very large handsome sheep (not to mention alpacas, llamas, and a couple Paca Vicunas) (pics at the end of the post), I’m really drawn to the little ones, like the Shetland and Icelandic sheep.  And the Angora goats.

Here’s another adorable little Shetland.  This guy is 9 months old.  He’s barely the size of our English Cocker, Rigel (whom I don’t think would quite approve of sheep;  I think he’d boof at them).

Their horns, nourished by an extensive blood supply, are downright hot to the touch.

What else did I do besides swoon over the animals?  (I admit I did a lot of swooning — last year I didn’t really get a chance to look at the animals, and honestly, that’s one of my favorite things.  Good thing I’m also a vet!)

I browsed through the barns and buildings, saying hi to folks I know:  Brooke of Sincere Sheep, Morgaine of Carolina Homespun (which I keep want to call Carolina Handspun), Kimber of Fiber Optic, Sarah and Sam at Cephalopod, Carl and Eileen of Bijou Basin. Carl gave me a skein of their new sportweight yak in a gorgeous green — I can’t wait to use it in a design!

I watched the llama leaping, which was entertaining, but took longer than I thought.  I’m fine seeing them in pens or walking around!

I ate roasted lamb one day, and lamb kebab the other.  I liked the lamb kebab better — the lamb was a bit milder.  I tried and bought some delicious raw cow’s milk cheeses from Sprout Creek Farm.  (I got the Ouray & Bogart.)

The Cooperative Press party Saturday night was a success! Wing & Clover hosted it in their studio, and we had knitters packed in & spilling out into the foyer.  I met up with Gryphon of Verdant Gryphon (she was dressed in linen finery!) — that’s Anna Dalvi next to Gryphon.

Sunday, after we broke down the booth (I think we were the quickest done — it’s the nice thing about only having books to pack up!), we had dinner at  Mercato in Red Hook.  Oh my gosh, it was delicious.

Monday I took the train to NYC and met up with my friend Claudia.  I dozed on her bedroom couch while she was teaching an opera lesson (yes, I was that exhausted), then went to the Natural History Museum (caught the spiders exhibit, fun!).  We ordered Mexican food in, drank tequila, and played Rock Band 3.  It was a perfect, laidback evening.

And Tuesday I came home.  :)

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Don’t forget to enter the giveaway for Audrey’s Reversible Scarves book!  you have til midnight PST tonight (Oct 25).

Coming up:  A review of Needles & Artifice (with accompanying giveaway) Oct 29.

You know it’s fall when

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a cloud of boat-tailed grackles descends on your yard. This is actually a very small flock. Sometimes the front yard is black with them and I have a pretty good sized front yard. It sounds like hundreds of squeaky gates when they are out there.

Cover Story Part 2

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The flip side of last week’s …

Are there any good books that you read IN SPITE OF the cover and ended up wondering what on earth the artist and publisher were thinking to pair up a cover that so badly represented a perfectly good book?

And … if you didn’t like the cover, what made you pick up the book? The author? Assigned reading from school? A recommendation from a friend?


Don’t forget to leave a link to your actual response (so people don’t have to go searching for it) in the comments—or if you prefer, leave your answers in the comments themselves!


Peak …

My creation

Foliage at its peak ~ Rhinebeck, NY ~ Oct 13th


Yarned by You: Findley Gallery

Last Wednesday just completely got away from me! But this week has been a little less stressful, so I hopped right back on the horse for this week’s Yarned by You. We’ll be taking a peek at Findley. This was a really hard gallery to put together because HOLY COW there are so many lovely things made with Findley! Here’s a tiny sampling…

Ripen, knit by GimmeCoffee, looks like  the perfect thing to toss over my shoulders.

The leaf motif really makes me happy! I’m very into leaves lately!

I’ve wanted to make a lace weight cardigan for a super long time. atlkaren made a Breezy Cardigan in colorway Bittersweet that is all sweet!

I love the color and drape! I could see how this light cardigan could complement many outfits in my wardrobe!

This Whisper Wrap in colorway crocodile was knit with perfectly even stitches by malteseparakeet.

The clean geometric lines are worth the miles and miles of stockinette!

Below is a knit that was designed by Caroline Fryar called Theme & Variation Tee. This one was knit by oregeoncharknits as a store sample.

 

Don’t you agree that this Tee in Renaissance looks so good on her that she needs to make one for herself?

This was made as a wedding shawl for jdcrowson’s pastor. She’s doing a series of 12 shawls in 2012 and it looks like she’s right on target!

The Aeolian Shawl was knit in Fresco. Findley really lends itself well to lace and wedding shawls, as this was by far not the only wedding shawl to choose from!

This is a novel sweater concept – a stockinette stitch fingering weight sweater with a laceweight lace sweater on top of it! The top layer is Findley in Fresco again.

17Q17 definitely did a lovely job knitting this! The stitch pattern on the laceweight reminds me a lot of Finch’s Wings designed by Caroline Fryar for the Findley Dappled book.

The ubiquitous Rockefeller knit in part with Findley. The dark purple solid is Renaissance. Rockefeller is designed for fingering weight yarn and both yarns used are laceweight.

I love that SkyBlueKayak took a risk using laceweight yarns and I love how it came out! The yarns compliment each other nicely!

That rounds up this week’s Yarned by You. As always, if you click on the pictures you’ll be linked to the Ravelry project page. What’s your favorite Findley knit? There are lots and lots of them, so you can be sure that I’ll feature more soon! (I haven’t even started on Findley Dappled!)

You can find Findley and the rest of the Juniper Moon Farm Yarns in a LYS near you by clicking here then clicking “find a store,” inputting your zip code and selecting Juniper Moon Farm as the yarn brand.

Winner, Winner, Chicken Dinner

It took me awhile to work up to this post.  I had planned on blogging the same day we processed our meat chickens, but have been having trouble wanting to do it.  Now that it is said and done I didn’t want to think about it anymore, and we definitely won’t be doing it again.

You see, originally there were 2 other people involved with this whole venture.  I agreed to buy and feed the chickens and keep them healthy until slaughter.  The other 2 people would take care of building a plucker and help with processing, since they had experience.

They backed out in September.  Paul and I were left with 45 birds that were going to need to be killed, plucked and processed.  On top of all the other stuff we have going on.

Paul gamely built a tabletop plucker.  It took a few weeks of work, but it’s a beauty and it works like a dream.  I found a whole TWO volunteers to help out (my mother and my friend Theresa saved our bacon that day!).

I had trouble dispatching bird number one.  The kill didn’t go as neatly or quickly as I remembered from the class I took.  I ended up nearly in tears and Paul had to finish it.  After that, he had to take care of that part. (and was very sweet about it – he stroked them to calm them and told them he promised to make it quick.  He even asked each one of it was “ready”)

Then there was trial and error finding a rhythm that worked for us.  I had to show how the birds were to be  eviscerated.  It was slow going, and we had issues with the differing temps required to scald the birds and then package them in shrink bags.  My OCD and anxiety about contamination were working overtime, and I was terribly relieved that everyone else was as mindful of it as well.  I think we did a spectacular job of keeping it all clean.

By the time dusk was settling in we had finally managed to get our groove going (not without the help of Theresa’s famous margaritas I should add) but we had only processed 19 birds when it was all said and done.

We had a huge mess to clean up (feathers and small blood droplets went EVERYWHERE from the plucker) and we were tired, both physically and mentally.

I took to calling each bird I grabbed a “tribute” (have y’all read The Hunger Games?) and I am now the owner of a bloody shirt I will forever call the “murder shirt”.

We sold 6 birds to the people that showed up, gave some away to our lovely volunteers and have a few left for our freezer.  Not what we expected, but better than nothing.

Clean-up actually went quite well – and quick.

But we still had about 2 dozen live birds left, and no one wanted to repeat the process a second time.

Even though it ended up being a massive money loss, we posted the remaining birds on craigslist for free.  A gentleman who raises meat birds down the road a ways responded and said he’d take them off our hands.

Turns out he usually sets aside a dozen or so to give to needy families, and ours would bolster that number.  That sounded perfect to me.  A loss of that kind of money doesn’t hurt so much if it went to a worthy cause.  ($50 a week in feed for 14 weeks, not counting the cost to make the plucker and buy packaging supplies).

We learned a lot about the process and about ourselves (we will survive the zombie apocalypse, for example) but it was a lot of work and a lot of expense and we aren’t sure we want to take that energy and time in that way again.  We’d rather focus on other things (like perfecting our vegetable growing? )

From now on we will just buy our chickens from the farmer’s market from a local farmer and be happy we don’t have to do it ourselves.

The upside to all of this is that we do have some lovely chickens in our freezer right now.

I roasted one for dinner last night and it was outstanding.  The carcass is simmering away to make stock.

And we are all reminded where our food comes from, and are much more grateful to have it.

 


Tagged: Farm, food

This Morning in Pictures

I had so much to do this morning but the light was so lovely that I finally couldn’t resist grabbing my camera.

Sabine is absolutely the happiest creature I have ever encountered in my whole life. She is just filled with joy all the time.

Lyra, one of our Colored Border Leicester ewes.

Charley the Wonder Pig

Buster & Charley

Charley and Buster

Young Adelaide

Churchill

Cini and Lucy

Lovely Hannah

Cosmo

Camouflage sheep!

Caramel Apple Tart

caramel apple tart

When I saw this recipe, I knew I had to try it.  It turned out to be very tasty indeed but less than photogenic as I had to substitute butter and milk for cream and that didn’t work very well. I don’t have a mandolin so my slices are chunkier. I just cooked mine a bit longer. The recipe gets a big thumbs up.