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Showing posts from September, 2025

Cars

I don't like them. Actually, more specifically, I don't like that they break down and need expensive repairs. If someone offered me a car that would never break down and would last forever, I wouldn't care what it looked like. It could be the ugliest car on the face of the earth but I would happily drive it if I never had to pay for another car repair.  Thus sums up a good portion of the last week. 

Fiber Monday - Something different

I don't have anything to show you this week. My inlay weaving project from my class is still on the loom at Fine Line because I have a little bit left to finish. I'll do that on Wednesday, so I can share it with you next week. I did manage to finally get my loom fully warped and have started weaving, but it's going to be the same guest towels over and over and you only need so many pictures of those.  Instead I want to share a couple of podcast recommendations and a book, specifically those podcasts and the book having to do with Kandahar Treasure .   As you know, I go through spurts of listening to podcasts while I clean the barn. During one of those spurts, I was working my way through the previous episodes of the Long Thread Media podcast where Rangina Hamidi, the founder of Kandahar Treasure , was being interviewed. I had never heard of either of them before. Kandahar Treasure is the organization that Hamidi (who is Afghan) founded in Kandahar, Afghanistan to employ w...

Celebrating a belated birthday

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Most of us were able to get together to celebrate P.'s birthday tonight. (Her birthday was earlier in the month.) As usual, we had a great time laughing and enjoying each other's company. Probably one of the more hilarious moments was when we were trying to figure out how many people we were so the table could be set. W. managed to get this picture in the middle of the discussion. (Yes, I know it seems like an easy thing to figure out, but I find it takes a bit of figuring when not everyone is there and there are also significant others who are.)  The answer ended up being 16 if you were curious.  Another amusing moment, and one that will give you a little insight into large family dinners, was when MC's phone, which has a decibel meter on it, gave a warning that the sound level was too high. It also mentioned that it wouldn't be advisable not to stay in such an environment for any length of time. The announcement might have caused more uproar.  I love all these people ...

Tired

I have spent the last three days in a weaving class. It was fantastic and I enjoyed it very much. I'll finish my project up on Wednesday, so I can't show it to you yet. But as great as the class was, I am tired! First, there is just the sheer amount of concentration involved in the type of weaving we were learning. This was slow weaving at its finest in that each pass with the shuttle required hand manipulating where the yarn went. In the usual weaving I do, I can weave a yard of cloth in about an hour if it's a simple pattern. The weaving I was doing for class slowed that speed down to a few inches an hour. Next, to get to the class on time, I needed to get up earlier than usual in order to get the horses fed, turned out, and the barn clean. And no, I am not good about going to bed earlier than usual if I'm getting up early.  Finally, there is the whole being away from home during those hours and do not doing the things I usually do to keep the family ship afloat. Ever...

Learning something new every day

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I'm two days through a three day weaving class, but it's not the class I want to talk about. It's this plant.  The flower, with its little curlicues  The spiky seed pod And the cool looking purple-ish stems It is growing outside Find Line Creative Arts Center where my class is and I have become a little obsessed with it because it's so cool. I didn't know what it was, so I did what I always do... send a picture to HC, my daughter-in-law, who knows a lot about plants. It turns out that this is thornapple (or jimsonweed) and it is incredibly poisonous. And invasive. And also has unpleasant hallucinogenic properties. It's also been tied to witchcraft in previous centuries. But it's still a really cool looking plant.  I couldn't figure out why it looked so familiar even though I was sure I'd never seen one before. And then it came to me. This flower is on the cover of our Georgia O'Keefe book of her paintings. Evidently I am not the only one to be sm...

3 million

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The blog hit a rather large milestone yesterday in that according to the analytics it hit three million page views. That's a lot of views. I've been wondering recently if the blog had run its course, but that probably says more about the weird transition phase I'm currently in than anything else. I don't have young children anymore. Heck, we're coming pretty darn close to only having adult children now. Technically we're still homeschoolers, but the learning has shifted to the community college. We're definitely not empty nesters since there's still eight people living in the house. Not unlike most of my life, I don't easily fit into typical categories. Maybe that's the direction I start to aim my writing?  In the meantime, once again thank you to my faithful readers. It's so nice to have you along for the ride. Because having an audience means I can share exciting content such as the fact I'm writing this post from the laundry room where...

Fiber Monday - Not doing things

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While I did a lot of things this past week, well, one thing... Canning. It's hard to can and do fiber type things. Pretty much for most of the week all I was able to get in was a bit of dyeing. Clearly the theme of the week was put things in very large pots and cook them. Things such as cucumbers and choke berries and more cucumbers and some goldenrod. Here are the results: The bottom skein was the first in the dye pot, then the next day I put in the top one because there was still so much dye left. I could have probably gotten a couple more skeins dyed with this batch, which would become increasingly paler, but I didn't have the skeins, and if I did, they wouldn't have been mordanted. Maybe I can do this next fall, and be prepared with the right amount of yarn, because it would be really pretty.  Then came the weekend. Saturday was filled, so no fiber things that day, which brings us to Sunday. I had plenty on my list... Winding the warp into the loom, tracing my new musli...

Pandan cake

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What should I write about.... I could write about how our washing machine stopped working last Tuesday and how J. spent the entire day today trying to figure out what was wrong. But that's vaguely depressing and he is hopeful that the part he ordered late this afternoon will do the trick.  I could write about how I spent my afternoon, but I need to save that for tomorrow. The same with why my loom is still not warped. I could write about the weather and how much I really just want to wear sweaters, but that's starting to really scrape the bottom of the barrel.  So, I guess I will write about food. Again. This time it was Y. in the kitchen. She decided she really wanted pandan cake. (Pandan is a South East Asian plant whose leaves have kind of a vanilla/coconut/banana-y flavor. We discovered it on our first trip to Vietnam and we all love it.) Y. has made pandan cake before, but it has been a bit of a trial and error process. This time she decided to make a chiffon cake with pa...

Scenes from Saturday

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It was just a quiet day at home today. A day where I canned nothing. After multiple days spent entirely in my kitchen, I needed a break. So I started a fiber project... in my kitchen and put a bunch (250 g. to be precise) of goldenrod into a pot. I'll share the results on Monday. It also rained today, first early in the morning and then late afternoon. We really needed the rain, but the last time I looked at the forecast it wasn't due until around 6:00 and it came a little over an hour early. Because I was caught off guard, Emmy had time to do her very favorite thing in the world before I made it out to the barn.  And finally, one of K.'s most recent photos. I really love this one. He said he hadn't realized he had caught the lightning until afterwards. 

Food history

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I'm two-thirds of the way finished with reading, Ultra-Processed People: The Science Behind Food that isn't Food by Chris van Tulleken. It is a fascinating book and so much more than just about ultra-processed food. It has history, human biology, brain science, and sociology. While I will probably write more about the ultra-processed food bit once I finish it, I came across something this afternoon that I wanted to share with you in terms of adoption. "Flavour signatures of particular smells and tastes also allow us to identify food from our cultures -- historically food we would know to be safe. This learning starts before birth. Julie Mennella at Monell Chemical Senses Centre did an experiment examining how food choices during pregnancy influence future flavour choice. During the last trimester of their pregnancies, participants drank a big glass of either carrot juice or water for four days per week for three weeks. They did the same thing while lactating. Then, as the ...

My avoidance canning continues

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Today was pickle day. G. and I made ten quarts of dill pickles and five pints of bread and butter pickles. Plus, they all sealed! We still had some cucumbers left, so at some point I'll make and can some sweet relish. I did save some brine from the dill pickles if there are still some cucumbers left after that. I used nearly three gallons of white vinegar today.  I also juiced another 24 cups of choke berries. I think I have one more batch to juice and then I can make jelly. Fascinating times over here, but it keeps me sane because I can't really focus on all the bad stuff.  And for those who read to the end even when all I wrote about is endless canning, a brief update on how the community college classes are going for everyone. The shirt answer is they are going well for everyone. What has been interesting is all three have come home saying they are the only ones who answer questions in class. (They are all in different classes.) I'm fact, Y. came home and announced her m...

25 pounds of green beans later

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It's the end of the growing season, the country's descent into hell in a hand basket is speeding up, and I have a bit too much free time due to not enough clients this month. All of that together is a recipe for me to engage in an obsessive canning and making fest. The making end I shared yesterday, so today it's canning. The direct correlation between my existential dread and preserving food continues.  Yesterday, I popped over to my favorite family run farm stand where I know they sell in amounts suitable for canning. (Remember the corn ? Same place.) I wanted to see what was on offer because the pantry was bare of Dilly beans and dill pickles, with the bread and butter pickles running low. I was in luck and bought 25 pounds of beans and two packs of pickling cucumbers. With G.'s help, we did all the beans today. Those 25 pounds of beans ended up making 13 pints of Dilly beans with enough fresh beans leftover to have with dinner.  Only one out of the thirteen didn...

Fiber Monday - A whole lotta warp

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Before I get to talking about warps, I have a couple of other things to share first. Here is some handspun that I finally finished and got off the wheel.  It's a 2-ply Merino, and I wasn't sure I loved it at first. It's for the holiday sale, so I decided to wind it into a set of mini-skeins which I would them dye each of them a different color using natural dyed. The skein on the right is actually a prettier green in person (you know me and photographs). It was dyed with bindweed, which I have in abundance. I think I'll do goldenrod next because it is in bloom.  After I had mordanted this batch, I actually ended up liking the yarn more. It's now incredibly fluffy and bouncy. The other thing I wanted to share was my bodice Muslim that I drafted. The pattern drafting class I had been taking is meeting again, and we are now to the place where we are creating pattern blocks for ourselves. This is to my measurements and we'll do the first fitting on Wednesday. I stil...

The perfect antidote

I just finished The Blue Castle by L. M. Montgomery. If you're unfamiliar with that author's name, she also wrote Anne of Green Gables. If you haven't read this particular book, I highly recommend it.  One thing I have always loved about L. M. Montgomery's books is that she created strong and often outspoken female characters in an age where that was not the norm. (Anne was published in 1908 and The Blue Castle in 1926.) This book has the added enjoyment of watching the main character find her voice. It was the perfect antidote for this past week.  And one of my favorite quotes from it: "Fear is the origin sin. Almost all the evil in the world has its origin in the fact that someone is afraid of something. It is a cold, slimy serpent coiling about you." (p. 25)

More unpopular opinions, the thin skinned may want to move along

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A while back, while we were heavily in the thick of healing two newly adopted older children adjust to their new parents, siblings, home, language, and culture, I wrote a post with some unpopular opinions in it . I don't normally ask you to pause in reading the current post in order to read a previous one, but I'm asking you to do that now. If you weren't reading here in 2016, reading this past post will help you understand where I am coming from. Go on, click back, I'll wait.  Here's a picture from about that same time period to keep you entertained while we wait for everyone to get back.  R., H., and Y. at the Museum of Science and Industry Everyone back?  Good intentions don't go very far when vulnerable people pay the price. In the example I wrote about it was the children living in institutions who pay the price for orphan tourism. Nice people with good intentions get to feel as though they did a good thing while leaving unacknowledged emotional wreckage in...

Self care

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It's been a tough couple of days, huh? Sometimes you just need to pull back and take a break for a bit. What's on my list of things which help me regroup? Hanging out with my horses. (If you need to spend time with horses to regroup, message me.) Luke Major And if you've wondered how tall Luke is, I put the camera lens at my eye level, which is about dead center on the photo. His withers (the place at the base of his neck, are three inches above my head.) I've started a L. M. Montgomery book (The Blue Castle) that I have never read. Anne of Green Gables is one of my comfort books, so I hope this one will be, too.  I spent time with others and have plans for tomorrow as well. Tonight was the Inclusive Game Night that our church sponsors. It is something that H. and R. look forward to and enjoy very much. Though H. also enjoys it because sometimes she beats me, which she did in Rummy Cube tonight.  I worked in my studio. I didn't exactly make something so much as get ...

Distraction

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I don't know about you, but the past couple of days have felt so heavy for so many reasons, that I think we need something a little frivolous. So here are some terribly amusing (I think) chicken photos that K. took yesterday. 

America is a gun

It was a hard news day, huh? No one, regardless of their beliefs, should be gunned down. No one should suffer violence for their beliefs. Violence is never the answer. It is never something to rejoice over.  I think, in theory, many people agree with what I just stated. But I have been incredibly dismayed by my Facebook feed today at the number of posts which are stating how wonderful Charlie Kirk was and what a loss his death is. Do not forget that this was the man who said that gun rights were so essential that we should be willing to put up with the occasional victim. This is the man who said that gay and trans people should be killed. Exactly how do those sentiments line up with the idea that no one should be murdered?  While his death should never have happened, and I am sorry for his family, I will admit I am struggling with the whole thing. He went on record saying my children should be murdered because of who they are. He made life more dangerous for my family. He was ...

Ovinator

I think I have a solution to the conundrum that has bothered me for quite some time... why does everyone near Felon47 just go belly-up and go along with him? I find it baffling and disturbing. Then I remembered a bit from a Thursday Next book which I looked up this evening.  Now, I'm dropping you in the middle of the fourth book of the series. For some of this to make even the remotest possible sense, you will need a score card.  The narrator (I) is Thursday Next, who is having a conversation with Bowden, Millon and Stig (a neanderthal) who are other characters helping her out at this point.  Yorrick Kaine is the unethical politician who gets away with the most egregious of offenses.  Goliathopolis is the giant city from which the Mega-corporation, Goliath (which pretty much runs the world) operates. Mycroft is Thursday's genius, though scattered, exceedingly brilliant uncle, who invented The Ovinator . Landon is Thursday's husband. Formby is the England of Thursday'...

Fiber Monday - Sheep and Wool Festival

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I have a lot of sheep pictures on my phone, but I'll spare you and just share one.  This is a Ouessant sheep, which is the smallest sheep breed. They are from France and have very fine wool. I had no idea there was a flock in Wisconsin. I do have a secret (okay, not actually so secret) desire to have a collection of different sheep breeds. They look almost deer like.  Now that the sheep trivia is done, let's move on to the festival. G. and I watched much of the Shetland show which was pretty interesting. We then wandered around, bought some sheep-related items we needed, then hit the vendor halls. I think I was pretty restrained. I bought a pound of Shetland roving because it is the type of wool I dye and provide to my Sheep and Fiber class students. I was starting to run a little low, so this was a necessity.  My unplanned splurge was an inexpensive kit to knit this hat.  I'll make this once I'm done with the sweater vest I'm working on.  I also bought some but...