Smatterings

  • project SPECTRUM

    Surprise….   I joined Project Spectrum.  Of course I did. Everything I am knitting, everything I have been knitting, and certainly it follows that everything I will be knitting this month is one shade or another of red.  Some things, such as the lace scarf, are in many shades of red and pink.  At least for this month, I’ve got a shoe in.  Over the weekend I dyed more red / pink yarn.  This time, Peony, the same color that Margene used for her lovely Hanging Vines Stole.  I had run out of it, sort of gotten behind.  I shouldn’t let myself do that with this color.  It’s lovely.  If only I wasn’t marooned on sleeve island.

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    I probably shouldn’t admit to swimming ashore, abandoning the sleeves to the island.  Thing is, C’s birthday is Thursday and he wants a soft hat.  I found the softest baby alpaca I’ve ever felt for 50% off last week.  I bought one skein in a light beige, with the idea that if it over-dyed well I’d go back and get the remaining couple skeins. I let some of the light yarn peek through the navy dye to give it a tweedy look and give it some texture.  The yarn is amazing to handle, a bit like a dream, the stuff you could really have a relationship with, that is IF I had bought more than the one skein.  When I went back… gone.  Of course it was.

    My Dad, who says he’s right ALL of the time, IS right enough of the time to make me listen.  He reads my blog.  Although he doesn’t comment publicly, he sometimes emails me with his footnotes.  I know his feelings on selective cutting.  Keyword: SELECTIVE.  (I’m not in disagreement.  I just want to leave more of the big ones, we need them for our souls.)  Thanks, Dad.  This was his message to me this morning..

    Re your recent blog. The world we live in is a dynamic entity. Some
    things change with a frequency so fast that we miss their motion. Some
    things change with a frequency so slow that we are unaware
    of any
    change. Others have a frequency we are aware of. An old forest has a
    frequency of its own. It’s slow and we come to love its grandeur and
    stability but it’s moving in its cycle. The grand old trees will die and
    will be replaced. It is sad to see them go but wise lumbering just
    eliminates that part of the cycle that leaves dead standing trees. Man
    should recognize the need for more forests, not only for the atmosphere
    and storm water retention but for our souls and to crowd out houses.

    The school wood lot here (..) is sad to see. The old trees just
    die and stand bare until they fall. The woods at York County (reference to some cutting done on our farm) have
    recovered and look great.

    Thanks to Margene, for the help she gave me in getting that wonderful animated button onto my sidebar.

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    7 responses to “project SPECTRUM”

    1. I know what your Dad says is true, assuming responsible logging. The key. I also feel your sorrow at the sound of the chainsaws. We have new neighbors, who brought chainsaws, logging skids and chippers, and have been clearing out everything over the last full year. The rains *must* be washing away their topsoil, there is nothing left on that scar that once was a hilltop forest. *Responsible* is the key word.

    2. Your dad is very wise.

    3. Your dad is wise and writes beautifully, too. Why do we as a people have such a hard time with moderation?
      The new Peony is fabulous. Hanging Vines is truly one of my favorite knit projects ever. It is wonderful to wear and to touch. Thank you for creating such lovely yarn.

    4. Wow, what an awesome Dad!
      He not only reads your blog, but considers it and then thoughtfully comments. You’ve GOT to love that. 🙂
      Gorgeous yarn as usual.
      I tried an email yesterday, but got a bounce back on your account. 🙁
      Anyway, hope you’re well.

    5. I really like how your Dad phrased that. It makes for a much wider metaphor than just for trees.

    6. What a beautiful entry by your Dad! Wise and thoughtful words.
      Love that Peony yarn!! Next on my list of to-do’s after I finish my sweater is that yummy green yarn from you. I just need to find the perfect beads!

    7. marisa

      What a wonderful observation by your dad. I really love the part about the frequency of change…its so true.

  • “E” is for…

    Warning.. this is NOT about fiber,  that’s for tomorrow.

    It could have been any number of things that made me anxious today as I started out on my hike through the woods.  On my way to the trail, I’d passed a pile of huge, straight pine logs, at their landing, waiting to be loaded onto a truck.  It made me sick, there are few enough of these tall old pines.  I know about harvesting.  I know.  It did not matter.  I found myself hurrying along along the trail to one of my favorites, a big old pine that reaches all the way up, and rested my forehead against it’s trunk.  It occurred to me then, that I probably *am* a tree hugger.  (And I just might be granola, too.)  Then again, that might not have been the cause for my distress. There was that man that watched me get out of my car, hung around, and asked, ‘goin’ for a hike?‘ instead of getting in his own truck and driving away.  Even after I took off, I could feel his eyes on my back.   Instead of turning on my ipod, I left the ear plugs in my pocket and listened for a long while.  At what is generally my half way point, I just quit.  That’s when I knew what my problem was.  It was the sound of the chainsaws.   More to the point, it was the sound of the trees falling, and hitting the ground in the distance that was grinding into me.  I’d been thinking about this entry for a long time,  "E" is for the Ents.  The subject is so close to me, that I haven’t been able to post all week thinking about it.  And today, with each scream of the chainsaw, it came to a head. 

    The Ents are leaving middle earth.  It’s true.  The first time I walked *my* woods was magic.  It was summer and everywhere the undergrowth was fern, green, lush, and nearly waist high.  My giants were the biggest I’d ever seen.  There were so many of them together in so few acres.  C and I tried to wrap our arms around them.  We couldn’t begin to touch each others fingertips, they were that grand.  They were that old.   For the past ten years, I’ve been watching them die.  In the Northeast,  the biologists give many reasons: acid rain, beetles, drought, …whatever.  The truth is in there somewhere.   The Ents are leaving. 

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    9 responses to ““E” is for…”

    1. You’re so right and it’s tragic. But I do love that picture of you.

    2. Sad but true. I spent several summers on the St. John and Allagash in northern Maine. We rarely saw other groups on the river, but we heard the chainsaws and skidders all day long.

    3. Your Ent pictures are great–I’ve always loved them, too. Our neighbors across the street took down about 4 really tall trees last week, and it still saddens me.

    4. It’s terrifying, isn’t it, what’s happening to the forests. I wish I knew how to save them, but I can’t afford to buy all the land it would take to make a difference.

    5. My intellect agrees with your father, but my heart worries where the Ents will go. They’re leaving Middle Earth as well. We are leaving NOTHING to our children. I also worry that the magic is dying. Can we keep it alive?

    6. A wonderful “E” post. Wonderful and sad all at the same time. The thing I miss most out west are the trees.

    7. That is sad, sad, sad! Perhaps you might feel a little better if you planted a few trees. Are there any little saplings on your property that you could transplant somewhere where they’re needed? Think of the White Tree of Gondor. Gandalf found a sapling in the woods and brought it back to Minas Tirith, where it was needed. Perhaps you could do the same. And don’t forget Sam planting the mallorn tree in the Shire, either. The Shire was utterly devastated, but that one small action of Sam’s went a long way towards healing the scarred land.

    8. It is the sad fate of each generation to understand that nothing will be like it was for them. Although the only constant is change, we seem to be hard-wired for routine and routines. When it isn’t, it hurts.

    9. I watched as ancient trees at the farm reached the end of their life – some had to be removed, others were felled by strong winds. I planted many saplings but it will be my great grand children who will see them in their greatness.

  • sleeves, Sam & sparkle

    Congrats to all the finishers in the Knitting Olympics.  You are all medalists in my book.  The outside world, although it does show it’s existence on the box that is television, has little effect on the productive climate of Sleeve Island.  Sitting in a remote corner of an unknown world in our imaginations, it remains far, far away from outside influence.  The knitting continues.  I can’t blame my sluggishness on the warm temps, it is freezing out there.  It is just the nature of the island.  I’ve taken to whipping up strong lattes before sitting down.  No use, perhaps some knitting calisthenics?

    The temps are keeping Sammy in more than usual.  He’s been bringing me his rope to throw.  We call it Go Get It,  a cat version of fetch.   I throw the rope, he races after it, skidding and rumpling up any rugs he can in the process, then he grabs whatever he can of the rope and runs back to me, placing it back at my feet.  Occasionally he’ll try to draw C into the game, a rope fetch triangle.  His game, we play by his rules.   He looks pretty serious about this, doesn’t he?  Such a sweetie.

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    Saturday was the monthly spin-in at RI Handspun.  For those of you who have spun with me in the past several months, you’ll recognize this.  It’s on the Joy.  That means I’ve only spun it when I’ve been out and about.  After filling a few bobbins, I decided to spend my time Saturday plying some up.  So far, I have about 400 yards of the bubble gum, Barbie pink, sparkly, alpaca, silk, angelina blend.  Very yummy, VERY pink, very not me.   I know that it has to be the sparkle that has grabbed my inner magpie.  What else?  After weighing it on the OHaus, I figure I’ll end up with nearly 800 yds, about 100 yds. per ounce.  After trying several shots of this, I’ve decided that sparkle is directly related to movement.  Focus vs. sparkle.  Use your imagination.

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    9 responses to “sleeves, Sam & sparkle”

    1. I’m glad I saw it in person because it’s much more beautiful than it looks in the photograph. did you freeze at spinning?

    2. All animals named Sam apparently are very bright and very play-oriented. Oh and cute too. 🙂

    3. Very nice and even spinning. Pink is not one of my favorites either…..but I every now and then a pink will catch my eye.

    4. So flawlessly spun!

    5. MAN, that is gorgeous!
      Your plying skills totally impress. 🙂
      And, the pink is very me, so maybe I’ll purchase some if it becomes available?
      🙂

    6. I also have a black tomcat who plays fetch! Scath goes after paper balls, though. I love how dedicated they become to their chosen occupations, cats.

    7. Your cat fetches? Wow! Ours run after little red dots from the laser pointer only. LOL. YOur spinning is looking great – the pink and the red – interesting how the red just has flecks of the other colours in it.

    8. My orange and white tabby Crue fetched milk jug rings. When he wore out, he would stretch on the granite coffee table and pant. I love fetching cats.

    9. Pat H

      Lovely spinning. I just dyed some wool I hope to get spun this next week. (Really hate to wait!)

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

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