Smatterings

  • fibery weekend, almost

    If I were still looking for an F, I could have used Fun Fiber Friday with Friends.   What can I say, it was great.  Thank goodness we were able to visit before Steph’s talk.  The shop was very small and packed solid.  From where I stood, in the back of the store, it was easier to knit and visit than to hear (or see, for that matter) what Stephanie said.  But, there was the *before*, and the *after*.  It was all fun.  Check out Carol’s blog entry for details.  She does it better than I can, and she remembers everyone’s names!  I’m doing better, just don’t quiz me.  I will tell you that I did have a great time with Amy Sue, Carol, Cate, Cindy, Claudia, Jackie, Kellee, Kat, Kate, Kristen, Laurie, Linda, Marsye, Monica (go check out her handspun toe-up sock), Stitchy, Therese, Wendy, and Dale.  I can not link to all and get through my day.  Saturday morning when I woke with a barometric / seasonal sinus headache, I first thought to blame it on the superb top shelf margaritas of the night before.  Is it the blogggers drink of choice?  Mine, certainly.  If we could only get a margarita vendor at the fairs, hmmmmm…

    Scan001001_1

    Saturday’s mail brought me this from Isel, my Project Spectrum Postcard Pal.  Great job, it is beautiful, Isel.  Thanks.  You should recieve yours today.

    6 responses to “fibery weekend, almost”

    1. So great to see you again! I will be looking for you in Maryland. Two weeks… can you even belive it?

    2. Wow – you have some busy weeks coming up! You got to see Steph talk, now there’s more fibre festivals than you can poke a stick at!
      One thing that story about the penguin jackets doesn’t mention is that they ended up with boxes and boxes full of penguin coats supposedly. People like knitting for a cause. LOL

    3. I can’t help but be a little envious you all had so much fun. The PS postcard is fabulous. I’ll be looking for mine this week, too.

    4. It was fun, wasn’t it? Not quite the way I had constructed it in my imaginings, but the fiber folks never disappoint!
      Loved the penguin coats. What a nice thing to do for the creatures.
      Maryland soon!

    5. Oooh, pretty! I love that postcard!

    6. Sooo glad it got there almost intact. 😀
      This was a lot of fun. Don’t be a stranger!

  • Using up the ends…

    Penguinsweaters_150_1 from the Australian Associated Press:

    A worldwide army of little old ladies has found some far more
    appreciative recipients than grandchildren for their handknitted
    woollen jumpers.

    Their loving efforts to help sick little penguins off the
    southern coast of Australia have given new meaning to the term
    penguin suit.

    About 26,000 little, or fairy, penguins – which at up to 33cm
    tall are the world’s smallest penguin species – make their home on
    and around Philip Island Nature Park, a major tourist attraction
    about 80km south-east of Melbourne.

    Each evening at sunset, up to 2,000 penguins swim ashore at
    Summerland Beach and waddle up to their sand-dune burrows,
    delighting more than half a million visitors each year.

    But every month, nature park volunteers find one or two penguins
    covered in oil.

    And occasionally a major spill leaves hundreds in peril.

    A German shipping company was last year fined more than $1
    million for a 2003 spill at Philip Island that covered 12km of the
    coast, coating 24 penguins and killing three.

    It was the latest of about half a dozen significant spills to
    have plagued the area in the last decade, including one in December
    2001 that coated 360 penguins and another in 2000 that affected
    more than 200 and killed 12.

    It’s at these times that the grey army’s knitting skills come in
    handy.

    Usually the little penguins’ dark blue waterproof feathers keep
    their skin absolutely dry and able to cope with the bitterly cold
    water of Bass Strait.

    But the oil – as well as its removal process – interferes with
    their natural insulation, and the penguins, who swim straight to
    shore after encountering a spill, are usually cold, hungry and
    highly distressed when they are found, program coordinator Lyn Blom
    said.

    Despite the volunteers’ best efforts, until a few years ago
    casualties were high.

    But that changed in 1999 when the nature park put out a call for
    knitters to turn their attention from snowflake sweaters and tea
    cozies to penguin jumpers.

    The doll size, tight-fitting 100 per cent wool sweaters keep the
    penguins warm during the rehabilitation process and stop them
    preening and ingesting the poisonous oil, and lifts their survival
    rate to about 98 per cent.

    Getting the jumpers on can be a struggle as the one kilogram
    animals are more feisty than they look, Ms Blom said.

    "They look small and cute, but they have small person syndrome
    and they can be nasty," she said.

    "They peck and they fight. You have to be pretty strong to
    survive in the ocean, they have to be pretty savvy and look after
    themselves and they do."

    Distressed penguins might not care about the latest vogue
    colours, but that doesn’t stop Ms Blom’s troop of committed
    volunteers – mostly ladies in their "autumn years" with plenty of
    spare time – letting their creativity swim free.

    The knitters continually push the fashion envelope with matching
    bride and groom outfits, AFL teams, and, from one elderly English
    woman, "the whole Manchester United soccer team".

    Read the article here.  This article may have already made its way around the blog-o-verse.  If so, I missed it.  Just in case you did too, I loved it.

    5 responses to “Using up the ends…”

    1. I hadn’t seen the article at all yet, but it is wonderful. What a great knitting connection…darn all that oil!

    2. That’s really sweet. It’s good to see knitting be of such great use.
      Good luck with your broccoli. Once I planted mine the deer ate it all.

    3. Oh my gosh! Can you imagine? It seems like only in my imagination could something like that be real! And yet, there it is!
      That picture is worth a million bucks of yarn!
      🙂

    4. O-kaaaaaaay . . . but what happens when they outgrow the sweaters? How do they get them OFF?

    5. Cute jumpered penguins. I can easily visualize the struggle to get them suited.

  • upcoming

    Plaza_sweater_from_rowan_classic_cafe_3
    Question:   Have any of you
    knit this jacket?  I’ve had this picture in a knitting file on the
    computer for months.  Lots of months.  It has passed the test of time.
    I still like it.  I haven’t tried to find the pattern so I don’t know
    if I like the rest of the jacket or just the teaser in the photo.
    I’ll finish the last piece of the Vine Lace Cardi tonight.  With luck,
    and some free time this weekend I’ll get it sewn up and the neckband
    knitted.  Earllier this week, I entertained thoughts of how nice it would be to
    wear it Friday when I met knitter / blogger friends at a Harlot book
    signing.   Oh well.  It wasn’t that kind of week.  There will be plenty of opportunities coming up.  This is, afterall, the start of the fiber fair season.  Check out my side bar.  I’ll be listing those in the NE part of the country.  This Saturday, though not a fair, could turn out to be mighty fiberly.  A neighbor is shearing Saturday.  Next weekend is CT Sheep and Wool, followed by Maryland the week after and then New Hampshire the weekend after that.  Enough to wear out even the most ardent fiber fiend.  Fun!  Then, if you can muster enough strength and have anything left in your budget, Estes is right around the corner.  Sorry folks on the West Coast.  I know you have your schedules too, I just don’t know about them.  My problem, as I look around, is too much of everything already waiting.  I still have freaking Bess, all nine lbs of her!  If only the spring fairs had Rhinebecks food (chocolate).

    Just wanted to show you how quickly my broccoli and lettuce seedlings have sprouted. I planted these last weekend.  Sam has tended them since.

    P1010341

    P1010345    P1010346

    I’d have my "H" if the darn Hummers would just show.

    Oh, Isel..?  It’s finished.  Is it fair to send a postcard in an envelope?

    14 responses to “upcoming”

    1. debby

      i knit this sweater with knitpicks alpaca in almost the exact same color of green. it came out great, although sweaters in southern california don’t get much wear. i get a lot of compliments on it when i wear it, and the twisted fringe collar border amazes everyone. its one of those simple embellishments that to the nonknitter seems impossibly difficult. i really like this sweater.

    2. I guess I’ll see you tonight in Grafton. And Blogless Sharon and I are going to CT next Saturday.

    3. “Hope in a sprout,” as I’ve been saying. I made a big boo-boo last night. I put my seedlings outside and forgot to bring them in last night. They look all right now, but could they have gotten shocked? We’ll see, I guess. Damnit. I’m still waiting for the hummers, too. Maybe we’re just rushing them too much.

    4. My postcards were just dropped in the box and arrived safe and sound…ribbons, brads, etc all in tacked.
      The jacket is fabulous. I’ve seen it around on a blog or two.

    5. Sam doesn’t look like a very big kitty in that picture. But so CUTE! And the seedlings! I can’t wait for the day when I have some space to grow veggies. *dreamy sigh*
      I grew up not far from Estes, and all that time never had a clue there was a fiber show there. Weird!
      *gently rubs Sam-ears*

    6. Tish

      Clara from the Knitter’s Review put up a list of all(?) of this year’s fibery fests last week. I haven’t seen that sweater before but I like the fringe on the collar. Sam is showing remarkable restraint. Our kitty used to love to nibble seedlings.

    7. Mine is on its way in a yellow envelope. No rules, just colors. 😀
      I’m just hoping it gets there in one piece.
      MDSW, can’t wait!

    8. Don’t forget about the MA Sheep Show on Memorial Day weekend.

    9. Sammy keeps the squirrels away who would rip up the seedlings, eating them or not. Good boy. I need a Sammy for the voles.
      Is Bess a cautionary tale? I’m threatening to be awash in sheep and alpaca fleecing. Yikes.

    10. ..somehow I think Sam SEES them grow! Love all your pics

    11. Whenever I plant any seeds, my cat lays straight on them on the soil… It doesn’t help them grow, unfortunately! >< I'll stick to some flowers this year! ^^ I like the sweater, try to knit it, I'd love to see the result!

    12. Well, Sam’s quite the gardner. And I covet all your gathering opportunities. Seems the only one we have here of any size is in Chicago at an ungodly time of year for me. So, I’ll have to come to the east coast I guess.

    13. I am excited for CT on Sat. — have you been there before?

    14. Waaah! I will be missing all of the spring fairs. I hope you come home with lots of great stuff and great stories!!

Our lives are dyed the colors of our imagination.” ~ Marcus Aurelius

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