Saturday, June 23, 2007  (about 7:20am) 
 

Marginal
Notes:

Weather: Unseasonably cool.  Some parts down in the 40's F over night.  Today so far is cool and clear with bright blue sky.  Supposed to be comfortable 60s-70's.  Hot weather due in later in the week.  

Current projects:

 

Current Projects:

Vest for Steve out of some gray/tan handspun.  If he is a good boy and quits smoking, I'll add sleeves to it and make a sweater.

Socks for me.

Various hats, scarves and mittens.  I want to have some on hand to sell at the CT Sheep Show in the Spring.

Projects on hold.  I'm bored with these!:

A lace scarf out of hand painted Merino.  This is a test project for the business.  I might start to sell this yarn.  Haven't finished it.  Not crazy about the colors.  Maybe I'll make it into socks instead.

Charcoal gray alpaca sweater.  I have misplaced the instructions.  Should be interesting to finish it without them. 

No quilts in progress

 

             
           

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     I've been extremely tired and achy for the past few weeks.  No amount of sleep seems to revive me.  I start my new fibromyalgia medication next Friday and I can't wait!

I've been a plying fool here.  Every evening after dinner, I try to get a skein plied.  I never realized how many single ply skeins I had scattered throughout this house.  I've been gathering them to ply and boil.

That is my new procedure.  Ply and Boil.  I love bright colors and I tend to lean towards them when I purchase roving or fiber to spin.  The problem I have noticed is that many vendors either in haste or ignorance do not set the dye.  When I would wash the skein to set the twist, the colors bled profusely.  I've even had some fiber that would dye my fingers while I was spinning it.  That really frosts my cake!  So my new ritual is instead of just washing a skein, I boil it.  I set up my old crock pots*, wet the skein and put it in the pot with a little wool wash and vinegar.  Set the pot on low and go to bed for the night.  

In the morning, the HOUSE STINKS!  What with the usual animal stink, the fragrance of wet wool and vinegar really wakes you up in the morning.  But in the crock pot the wool will be hot and the water clear.  All of the dye has been absorbed.  I let the skein cool down on it's own as I don't want to agitate it and have it felt.  Once cool, I'll wash it again to be rid of the vinegar smell and hang it out to dry.

Bunnies are good.  I clipped Ruby and Eloise a bit this past week.  It has been really warm some days and even with the fans and AC in the bunny barn, they were uncomfortable.  Eloise hadn't molted yet so I didn't get a good length on her fur.  Ruby seem ready.  I didn't take it down to the skin as some breeders do.  I just can't seem to do that.  I clipped Isadora's face and a few knots.  She freaked out as it was her first encounter with the clippers.  

Then there is Henry.  Henry has always been a little spitfire.  He kicks.  He bites,  He scratches.  He thumps.  And we discovered, he chews his fur.  Henry was and still is a mess with his coat.  He is horribly matted.  The mats on his back were actually FELTED.  He chews and chews on it.  Steve and I got a good portion of his back shaved and we had to go to the skin to do it.  But his chest and belly have to be done still and he is having no part of that.

So I made an appointment for him at the vet.  He has to go in on Monday night for a well bunny exam and an assessment of the situation.  If he gets the okay, I will be taking him in for a sedated thorough shave AND he will be neutered.  I think the neutering will help to improve his disposition.  I'm just hoping the vet doesn't think he has been neglected and calls the authorities on me!

The other buns will get a knot or small mat here or there on the coats, but Henry was the worst I have ever seen.  I feel terribly guilty about it, but he is a terror and I have the scars to prove it.

Ryan has been working steady and usually doesn't get home until later in the evening.  He put in a 12 hour day this past week.  We finally got to view his grades from the last semester and they were NOT good.  We are going over to meet with GK this morning to discuss his future.  GK wants him to transfer to a local school, since, as he put it," the kid is wasting money".  I think there is a deeper problem and I was afraid it might be drugs.  But as usual with GK, it all comes down to money.  I dread this meeting.  I haven't seen my GK, my ex, in well over a year and that is the way I like it.

Even though it costs us more money, I want Ryan to graduate from Plymouth.  It's a good school and he can and will learn a lot.  He just seems to have had a very bad semester.  He will have to take a heavier load now to make up his failures, but I think he has learned his lesson.  The Fs seem to have been a total surprise for him.  

What with Steve being sick and all these past 6 months, I hadn't kept in as close contact with Ryan as I had in the past.  He was more on his own.  I didn't drive up there to check on him. Or take him to dinner or just to visit.   I only went up for Spring Break.  I think he needs us to make an appearance on a more regular basis to keep him focused.

Ryan has always been a quiet and sensitive kid.  He thinks and wonders about everything in the universe.  Where as GK, his father, is a very shallow person only concerned with keeping up appearances for the neighbors etc.  The money spent for the college appears to be his major concern.  As he said to me, "no use throwing good money after bad....."

Keep your fingers crossed that this meeting goes well.

* I have two old crock pots from the 1970s(one is poppy red color!) that I use for fiber and dyeing.  They work great and can usually be found at a yard sale very cheap.

  

Recently completed projects-most recent first:

    Purple socks for Kathy
A Shetland lace scarf out of baby alpaca spun on Prudence my antique Shaker wheel. Mittens for a woman in my unit made out of bits and pieces of yarn from the stash Mittens for my supervisor out of some Noro I had in the stash.
Mittens for Ryanne to match the Shetland lace scarf out of the softest Merino wool Shetland Lace scarf out of pink angora.  I need to block it as it seems to have grown when I washed it.  It's now about 8' long!  I gave this to Ryanne's mother.  She loves it. A blue and multicolored handspun, multidirectional scarf.  I gave this to Ryanne's father as a combo Christmas & birthday present.
Finished a hat out of multicolored handspun from roving I purchased at Rhinebeck last year.  It's pretty shades of blues and greens.  I made it for the Tamarra the temp that left work and now is in school in NH.  I need to make her some mittens too and I will mail them to her. Finished a Shetland lace scarf in greens & orange hand painted Merino from the NH Sheep show.  It's for Ryanne for Christmas Started and finished a quick multi-directional scarf out of the same green homespun for the other temp at work (Tamarra) who was leaving.  She's going to school in NH so she'll need it.
Knit another hat for Ryanne.  This one larger and out of green homespun.  I added a few stripes of orange to make it the colors of the Irish flag.  She's very Irish.  A blue hat with pink embroidered flowers and beads.  I gave it to another girl at work for her toddler daughter. Little basket weave socks for a toddler.  I gave the to a girl at work for her 18 month old daughter.
A hat for Ryanne out of some blue Merino.  I think it's too small though. A homespun wool scarf in Autumn colors using  a Shetland lace pattern.  It's my first attempt at lace and I'm enjoying it.   Socks.  Two pairs.  One for me and I gave the other to Ryanne.
Made a quick scarf to wear to work out of the recycled silk I purchased on vacation. Ryanne has the green sweater.  I haven't seen it or her for a while.  I have no idea what stage it is at.  She was lengthening the sleeves (I have very short arms) and adding volume to the neck. Socks.  Blue & green variegated yarn.  I gave them to Ryanne
Multidirectional Diagonal scarf out of brown homespun wool and alpaca.  I gave it to Jack the Therapist.  He didn't have a scarf. Finished the never ending cardigan turned vest!  The buttons are sewn on, I just have to make button holes and block it. Pair of mittens for a child.  They are knit out of Blue Wool-Ease from Lion Brand so they will be washable.  I gave them to Chef Dave at work for his little boy Michael.
A multidirectional diagonal scarf for Dennis out of blue homespun wool. A scarf for the scarf swap at our spinning guild made out of a mohair blend I purchased at Rhinebeck and some blue homespun wool. Mittens for the girl who lives down the street made out of brown alpaca and a wool in autumnal colors.
Another hat for my chiropractor's baby out of multicolored acrylic.. Blue mittens to match the scarf for Ryanne  A simple gray winter hat. It's from the Border Leicester fleece that I bought last year.  It's for LP for Christmas. 
A turquoise blue wool and silk blend scarf for Ryanne. Socks out of hand painted wool in lovely muted, "desert" colors.  I inadvertently washed them and the wool felted.  I now have slipper socks. A grass green colored angora & alpaca simple raglan sweater
Hot pink hat for my chiropractor's baby. A cowl from a blend of Cotswold wool and alpaca. A glittery scarf with yarn purchased from Threadbear.
Hat for Dennis of  homespun charcoal gray Corridale wool. An ugly brown sweater for Dennis out of a mix of homespun wools.  He loves it Multicolored socks for me.