Tag Archives: LRB

The LRB, a Safe Haven and Refuge


Where can you go when the world seems to have painted a big red target on your backside?  You got it, the Little Red Barn.

One of our Barnie pals texted me this morning to ask if she could just come get a little peace and quiet in the LRB today, knowing it wasn't one of our regular get-together Saturdays.  She had spent a hard week, "vacationing" with family, and that had taken quite a toll on her.  What had been billed as a time for some siblings to get together and enjoy each others' company turned into a marathon group backbiting event.  Ouch.  This calls for some extended BARN TIME.

She showed up with her knitting projects and I left her alone with her yarn and her thoughts while I went about my morning farm chores.  When I finished, I joined her in the barn with a big cup of coffee for each of us, and took up my own stitching.  How awesome for me to have an excuse to sit and crochet while our friend, let's call her "Marilyn," poured out her painful story.

I was so humbled to see that she felt safe, and relieved to have a place to let it all hang out - to air the litany of petty incidents that had ruined her time away, and stolen all her spare thoughts even after her return.  As the hours slipped smoothly by today, we shared lots and lots of stories of our lives.  I learned lots about my friend that our previous visits had not revealed.  I got to see lines of tension melt off her face and sweet, relaxed smiles replace them.  We laughed.  I'm not sure she had laughed in a while. 


And look here - I even got to sit still long enough to get some spinning done!  "Marilyn" was shocked, and glad that her visit had given me just the excuse I needed to carve out a bit of "me" time, too.

This, I believe, begins to approach the core of agriculturally supported community.  We're here for each other.  What may have begun as a love of knitting, yarn, or fuffy critters, blooms and grows into a love for the other people similarly attracted.  We're drawn together by the stuff of the farm: the open air, the smell of fresh dirt, the doe eyes of the alpacas, the silky softness of the shorn wool, the hot coffee on a brisk day--who knows what element sums it up for each person, but we find ourselves gathered in the cozy barn every Third or Fourth Saturday, anxious to pick up where we left off last time--anxious to be known and valued a little more deeply.

And now, we see that the need for this space, this safety, this refuge, comes more than just on the appointed days.  So I want you to know, that if you find yourself in need of some quiet Barn Time, anytime, day or night, just text me. 

I'll leave the light on for you.




What’s Your Superpower?



Blistering.  Today, summer finally started to show its teeth with temperatures around 102, and threatening to get worse in the next few days.  But the Barnies, gathered in the LRB, fought back with our secret weapon - four flavors of ice cream.  Oh yeah... much better.

Shielded from the heat, we spent some time mulling over an idea I had originally posted on Facebook, about the bartering/time bank concept.  A friend of mine in Los Angeles is active in a Time Bank program there, and I've been very intrigued with his reports.  This idea dovetails nicely into the thought I've had for a long time, that the JRF community could do something very similar.

In a community like ours, and many others, the members each possess lots of amazing skills, interests and passions.  They also have certain weakness or needs.  The beauty of community is that these strengths and weaknesses can fit together like puzzle pieces to form some wholeness.  Sort of like the Avengers, we can band together and take advantage of all the amazing things each one of us can do.  I help you, you help our friend, our friend helps me.  It all comes back around.  We keep the resources local, cut down on the need for cash (or debt), and we live Awesome.  Sound interesting?

We have a lot more mulling and research to do, but I think we've started a very good conversation.  To help us along, I sent a sign-up sheet around the room today, having any interested Barnies sign their name, list their skills (or Superpowers, as I like to call them) no matter how unusual, and their contact information.  We'll build from this list.  If you'd like to be included, please drop me an e-mail - the more the Awesomer.  If you have any ideas about how you think this might work, please let me know.  I'll be stewing on it too.

In the meantime, we packed the LRB with an almost-record-breaking group of friends - some old-timers and some first-timers, and shared our common thread (get it?) by knitting, crocheting, and spinning together.


Denise DOMINATED our Show and Tell time with all her State Fair entries!  Wow, has this girl been busy!


Hanane's tri-loom piece, whipped out in very short order...


Annie takes a break from her stitching while Gin continues work on her very gorgeous embroidery piece.


Lisa takes notes and Hilary spins alpaca.


Suggie knits and enjoys her first time back to the LRB in some time.


Grandma Tutu, also absent too long, joins us again with a beautiful lace piece - with the right amount of stitches on the needles!


Rita dug deeeeeep into the stash to find this bright yellow roving.


Sweet Brenda was back after an extended absence.  Life has a way of pulling us away from our true loves sometimes, but just for seasons.  


Smokey navigated all the whirling spinning wheels without getting her tail caught.  We were in awe.


Greta's soft yarn.


CJ's funny stories.


Solving sock issues.


Tutu's ride comes to fetch her.  Hiya Phil!

We are an awesome band of Avengers.  I hope you'll suit up with us to find out how we can all contribute to the shallow places in each others' lives, filling them up, rounding them out, and being filled in return.



The Heat is On

Has your week been as hectic as mine?  It's been a "good" hectic, if there is such a thing, but still...


We added eight new pullets to our laying flock, though it will be a couple of months before we see any eggs from these little girls.  They're getting acclimated to their new digs, and settling in nicely.


A new spinning class graduated with mad yarn-making skills.  They're on the look out for good used wheels, so if you hear of one, give me a ring.


A couple of groups of kids came to the farm to meet the animals and learn about yarn making.  This just never gets old.  And as usual, Vanni thinks it's all about him.  He walked over and sat down with this group to get his picture taken.  The boy knows the drill.


All the dyeing we've been doing is finally coming to fruition - several blends of yarn, in a dozen colors will be available in the LRB, beginning on Saturday, for your knitting-felting-weaving pleasure.  Come squeeze the Merino, mohair, alpaca and cotton!


Pal Chris spent hours with me yesterday re-organizing the LRB (that job never ends) both for this Saturday's Third Saturday Knit/Spin-In, and also for Farm Camp, which begins on Monday.  It looks like Farm Camp is going to be nearly full and quite a blast.

I'd love to see you tomorrow in the LRB if you're free.  It's tidier and roomier than it's been in a long time - come take advantage of the extra elbow room, the hot coffee, and the always delightful company.

TGIF!

Fingers and Wool

Four new spinners took some wool for a spin today.  We all got the amazing euphoria of the "aha" moment, when the wonders of fiber twist into focus.  This group of ladies, all with their own relationships with yarn already, are taking it to new levels. 





They're off to a great start, and the beginning of a beautiful friendship...


Wool Washing Workshop This Saturday

Sure, buying raw wool is the most economical way to buy fiber, but then you have to CLEAN it.  Is this intimidating to you? 


 Get the confidence you need this Saturday at the farm - we'll teach you to skirt and wash your fleece with ease.  Make this big scary job into one you're not afraid to tackle, and take on any gorgeous fleece that comes your way.

Come to the farm Saturday at 10 AM for a hands-on workshop and learn how to separate the good from the bad, and how to clean the fiber without felting it. Turn your sow’s ear into a silk purse.

Observing is free - come, learn, get your hands lanolin-y. Take home some handouts and new confidence. Bring a fleece and we’ll skirt it for $10. We’ll draw straws, and the winner will get her fleece WASHED for free.

Rumor is that our web designer and fellow Gulf Coast Native sheep breeder, Shaun Jones will be bringing our two new Gulf Coast sheep the same day! (Black and white twin brothers… oh yeah…)
RSVP here or on FB or e-mail so we can plan a bit…

Fill ‘Er Up

Today we filled up the barns.  Filled.  Up.

The Cadillac shed (it's a long story how this structure got its name) we filled with over 200 bales of hay.  Ted has a friend at work who raises cows on the side, and had some square bales to sell.  He gave us an outrageously good price, plus delivery and tons of help unloading and stacking.  An amazing deal.  Thank you Roger, Kim and Riley!  Thanks also to our friend Will, who loved playing farmboy by tossing bales down from the trailer.  All that hay going in the barn was like watching art happen.  If I can keep this dry, and if the sheep like it (ohpleaseohpleaseohplease...) we'll be set for months.

Will and Roger lead the hay brigade.

By the time they were done, the barn was filled to the doors, and we all heaved a sigh of relief.


Meanwhile, at the other end of the property, the Little Red Barn was filling up with a near-record-breaking turnout of knitters and spinners.  We've observed a law of nature that when someone has to leave early from the LRB, more people come to take their place, and we always seem to have enough chairs.  It's a mystery beyond science how this happens every time...


All we know is, we've never had the barn so full of friends that crazy fun didn't break out in large quantities.  A bountiful selection of baked goods never hurts either.


Beautiful projects form on needles, coffee and sweets are consumed, stories told, jokes shared, fresh air breathed, nerves soothed... it's what we do.


We got our money's worth with the AC blasting today.  Even with oppressive heat outside, the LRB stayed cool and refreshing.


Had to capture Chiyo modelling her knee sock in progress... 'specially because it coordinated so well with her gangsta outfit.


We're already looking forward to next Saturday's special workshop: Skirting a Raw Sheep Fleece.  Details coming up tomorrow...

Graduation



Smiles of satisfaction on the sweet faces of the knitting class just concluded.  Stockinette, garter, ribs, eyelets, cables, moss stitch, SSK and more - BAM!  Nothing can stop these ladies now.

Next stop: Socks.  Bring it.

Color Us Delighted

Day Exceeds Most Optimistic Expectations.  That should be the headline.  What a beautiful day yesterday.  I honestly thought we'd be running back and forth between the dye pots outside and the AC in the LRB.  But it turned out to be so pleasant, that we all just camped out in our comfy spinning chairs under the trees, with our fiber and yarn perking away in the colors.


Combine the usual delightful fiber/bff time at the farm with the added drama of dye pot serendipity, and you have yourself one jolly spring day, let me tell you.


Misty's four lovely daughters (yes, they're quads) added their color sense to several of the colorways that emerged from the steamer, and they also enjoyed lovin' on the big dogs and collecting eggs.


We used several different dye methods, but they all start with soaking the fiber in soap and/or vinegar.


Ms. Amy, a high school art teacher, hand painted some roving, rolled it in plastic wrap...


...see, kind of like a cinnamon roll, and stuck it in the roaster to steam.


Beth shows off a wrapped roving about to start steaming.



She also put some fiber into the kettle to get a more monochromatic effect.  Beth likes purple...


Trying to get a shot of the cool dye solution in one of our crock pots, all I could see was the reflection of the beautiful trees overhead.


Ah, here we go... isn't this like something you'd see Harry Potter concoct for one of his classes?


Ms. Amy and I tried some solar dyeing on the front porch.  We put some fiber into vinegar water in a big pickle jar...


Added several colors in powder form...


And watched the warm solution move the dye around and around through the fibers.  This method is fun when you want to let go of all control and just let the elements do the work.


And the colors that emerged.... man... these ladies have wild imaginations.  Lots and lots of brights...


And some really luscious neutrals...


The rich colors just kept on coming!  In fact, we had such a good time, and had set up such a lovely safari Dye Camp in the back yard that I imposed on Rita to come back today to dye more fiber!



Little Hands, Big Ideas

Loved our visit with Brownie Troop 3156 yesterday... so many questions!  I think they went away with a fuller understanding of where their food and fiber originates...

Wool Spinners
Greeted by Vanni




Meeting the Jacobs

Gathering Eggs
That's our job... filling little hearts with the sights, and sounds, and textures of real life.  Life on the farm.

Dye Trying

Emma's Yarn
 I'm really looking forward to Saturday - not only is it our regular Third Saturday fiber get together at the Little Red Barn, but out under the shade trees, we'll be cooking up some scrumptious color in the dye pots.  Rita and Peggy HR have offered to help by bringing some turkey fryers and crock pots, so we should have no lack of ways to get color on your fiber.

Bring what you have to dye, or get some here - yarn or roving - and we'll play.  All the gorgeous yarns at Maryland Sheep and Wool have been haunting me in my sleep, and I'd really like to experiment with some fun color combinations myself. 

The weatherman says it will be a warm sunny day, perfect for hanging out under the trees.  You might want to prepare for a few bugs... mosquitoes and chiggers have been documented here in the past couple of weeks.  I want you to be comfortable...

Looking ahead, remember we have our fleece skirting/washing workshop coming up on June 2, as well as an amazing double knitting workshop on June 9.  More details about those will be forthcoming.

See you Saturday!  10 AM to 3 PM...

Emma's Yarn becoming a hat...