Last weekend we went to the Cascades Raptor Center in Eugene. I highly recommend visiting if you are in the area.
Dennis got the best photos of the day (see above!), but here’s one I took of a Kestrel named Puck. He was very close to the wire mesh of his cage, so I wasn’t able to blur it out completely:
There is this time of night — well, 1:30 in the morning to be exact — when the whole house is dark and the traffic on the highway has died down. I go into the kitchen where the windows aren’t covered and stare out at the hills and the silhouettes of all the trees that surround us. Goosebumps. Never fails.
I can’t say with certainty why we love Oregon so much but couldn’t handle Connecticut. They’re both green, with some beautiful scenery and a great emphasis on outdoor activities. Maybe it was just the bad timing in our personal lives of when we chose to go to the east coast that soured the whole experience for us. Connecticut felt claustrophobic to me, the trees oppressive. Maybe it’s the open spaces in Oregon that let me appreciate the trees more.
I just really like standing in my kitchen at 1:30 in the morning and looking out into the darkness. Contentment, with goosebumps.
Corespun yarn is made by taking a strand of thread or yarn — in my case I used cotton crochet thread — and wrapping fiber around it. There are some really amazingly beautiful results out there if you look through Flickr, and I was inspired by some fiber I received as a Christmas present from Mama & Papa Wolf in these gorgeous blues, greens and purples.
When it first came off the bobbin, I didn’t much like it, but after looking at the photo, I think I do. The colors are kind of selling it for me. It’s so different from what I usually try to spin and I only did a very small amount. I’ll have to try to work it into a project somehow… maybe stripes in a hat made with another similar weight yarn.
Hot damn, it’s been a long time since I updated. I’ve gone through a few job related changes recently and have just been too distracted to think much about the blogs. Hoping to change that, though.
Also, my little 365 project is so not happening. It was feeling too chore-like, not fun, so I stopped. I do have a few shots to share over the next few days though.
For now, here’s a project I worked up very quickly this weekend. This is some shetland & angora fiber from Malia Shetlands in Monroe:
Here it is on the bobbin — 2 plies, somewhat bulky. I didn’t bother measuring it because I knew I was going to just turn it into a hat right away, regardless:
And here’s the finished hat — just a basic single crochet in a spiral with a bit of decreasing around the ears to make it snug:
I love this color — I’m hoping to find more of this fiber, because I’d like to make a thinner, smoother yarn with it as well.
Well, that’s it for now… be back before another month has passed. I hope. I mean, yeah, I will. You bet.
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