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I think I figured it out…

Why I can never get onto my blog from home… Firefox automatically adds the www to the url, and I’m having trouble getting it NOT to.

Real blog post coming soon! I finished knitting the sky! I’m about to steek a sweater!

ETA-or maybe not. It might be my service provider. I brought my laptop to work and can get on here just fine, but it’s hit and miss at home.

Nothing To See Here……

Sorry for the prolonged lack of posting – I seem to have picked up a nasty, nasty virus and have been stuck on the couch for days now.  I am way behind on everything and I haven’t even been able to read thanks to dizziness.

There’s no new babies yet – the sheep have blessedly taken it easy on me in my misery.

See you back here soon.


Today In Pictures

There’s still far more snow on the ground than I thought there would be, given the high-ish temps.  There’s even a tree with little blooming leaf buds, and the daffodils are starting to poke out from the white drifts.

Mostly, though it’s just a mushy, muddy mess.

03.08.13a

03.08.13b

03.08.13c

03.08.13d

03.08.13e

All 4 of my ewes appear to be bred.  There’s going to be a lot of lamb sproinging here soon.

Spring is coming…..can you feel it?


Tagged: Farm, Pets, Seasons

Soft Afternoon

It feels like spring outside, a proper rainy spring. It’s humid, it’s just about sixty degrees, and it’s threatening to rain. It’s the perfect weather to nap to with the window open. I was attempting to capture the mood in my progress / yarn shots for my current sweater, but I think it came across a little more Dutch Realism than I was going for. Perhaps it’s the colors?

lofty

softness

loftiness
Don’t you just love how fuzzy the yarn is?

Trunk Show!

I’m posting this for Susie since she’s currently SNOWED in without power or internet or heat. Fortunately it was also 58 degrees in Virginia today, so the snow will melt quickly, but the heavy, wet snow took it’s toll on the power lines and a transformer blew. She has no idea when she’ll have power back. (Also fortunately she has a nice stack of wood to toss in the wood stove to keep warm.)

The Abonimal Snow Ernie

This is an old picture of beloved Ernie from 2011.

But, on Saturday she’ll be at Laughing Sheep Yarns in Charlottesville, VA for a trunk show featuring all the garments from the new yarn lines (including one more which still needs to be introduced!).

Sabine 2013 Pink

So come on down from 1p-5p to fondle all the new yarns and perhaps even try on a garment or two to see how you like it in person!

Carme SLEEVE DETAIL-Optimized

I think I might even be able to convince Susie to go to Amy and Paul’s to shower before Saturday.

Laughing Sheep Yarns
188 Zan Road
Charlottesville, Virginia

I Should Not Have Read

In Love, by Alfred Hayes.

It’s the wrong week for it. It’s been just colder and lonelier than I’d like–uncomfortable, bright, windy–which means that I maybe didn’t mean to spend the weekend reading a contemporary paraklausithyron, and I don’t know who recommended this to me in the first place. It’s a beautifully shadowy book, a story with nameless protagonists that appears in black and white, set in 1930’s or 40’s New York. It very realistically could been read as the dysfunctional denouement to the goofy, hopeful Paperman (which I liked. reservedly): Il Penseroso and L’Allegro, I guess.

There’s our man, 40’s, a writer, content to have his loneliness eased and his evenings occupied, maybe a bit of a failure. There’s our girl, 22, beautiful and vaguely melancholy, loves tarot cards and afraid of living alone in the city, divorced with an off-screen daughter, 4 or 5 already. She is unable to “gouge out…her own private ingot of happiness,” until, enter the rich guy, Howard, a friend of a friend who offers her $1,000 to go to bed with him.

The story is in motion. We know how it ends.

This seed having been planted, our writer watches her slow, drifting absorption into another life, pulled into orbit by the undeniable honeyed gravity of financial security. They break up and he hates her, he suffers (“I found myself horribly susceptible to small animals, ribbons in the hair of little girls, songs played late at night over lonely radios.”), wishes he could “really cultivate some impressive vice.” It’s almost boring, until she calls him back. Their spontaneous vacation to Atlantic City is the miserable, grating climax of the whole thing–with a backdrop of wrong hotel, wrong furniture, raw nerves, and bad sex (…rape? It’s neither no-means-no nor yes-means-yes, but horrible to read), we watch hopeful reconciliation harden into fatigue, annoyance, old resentment. They drive home the silent five hours home in the middle of the night. She’s gone, “happily bedded down with a textile company and a couple of chemical subsidiaries, which of course wasn’t the gentlemanly thing to say.”

There’s an economized metonymy throughout–you want to use terms like gem, novella, and refined–but I’m not sure if the end result of all this craftsmanship is anything but the flat deep impression of bleakness. The images that remain are the sexual elisions–the curl of hair in the bedsheets, the horrible discovery of toothmarks beneath a black turtleneck–but stronger by far is the feel of sulky antagonism.

Could you even write a book like this, now? So much is different, but, on the other hand, so much still boils down to money, feeling safe.

Beautiful. Total downer. Maybe bad to read in the pre-spring underworld weeks of March, and, warning: if you’re an overactive empathizer, you a) might have to guard against letting the antagonistic sulks bleed into your real life, and b) will hallucinate an old boyfriend somewhere in public exactly one (1) time while reading.


Granny Squares

I am learning the ropes of my new computer, which is a little bit different than your average lap top. Suffice it to say, that everything seems to be working just fine. I am beyond excited.

Also, I have been practicing granny squares. Some of them are a bit wonky, but I have been enjoying playing with the colors. Someday, I may finagle them into a blanket, wonky squares and all–not that I have the slightest idea how to do it yet. I figure by the time I need to know it, I will have figured it out.
grannysquares

Can’t stay long, have a new gadget to play with.

Yippee!

The new computer has arrived! It is glorious! A real post should be arriving shortly.

Surprise!!!!

And just like that, Lambing/Kidding season 2013 has begun.

02.28.13b

I had suspected we were pretty close to Milkshakes’ and Adelaide’s due dates based on how large and ungainly they were becoming, so yesterday Neve and I confined them to their own pen with some shelter and went to check on them every 4 hours or so.  It was a long night, and my cold seems to have made a bit of a comeback after not getting enough sleep.

Around lunchtime I peeked out and saw Adelaide on her side with her legs stuck out – not a normal position for a goat.  I rushed down with some towels and my phone (Neve bringing up the rear) just in time to see her push out a tiny brown blob of adorable.  I didn’t even have time to call for backup.

02.28.13a

Meet Caramel.  She’s just a little peanut, isn’t she?  Her daddy is Susan’s little LaMancha, Camembert.

Addy’s a bit reluctant in the nursing department, but she’ll at least not fight if we hold her to allow Caramel to nurse.

02.28.13c

02.28.13d

Tiny little ears!!!!

02.28.13e

Both mama and baby are doing fine.  Unfortunately my camera battery died just as Cara was finding her feet and starting to hop about.

02.28.13f

02.28.13g

Now begins a month of crazy waiting.  I’ll be bouncing back and forth between home and helping Susan with her lambs, so be prepared for more adorable than you can handle!


Tagged: Farm, Pets

Cold Cure

I’ve been down and out with a bad cold for the last several days.  It’s been adding a lot of anxiety for me because it’s kept me from getting much accomplished, and there is plenty to be done for spring (and those goat kids that look ready to be born any second).

But it’s also been nice to have a little pampering.  Everyone’s been helping to ensure I have a nice hot cup of Harney and Sons Cinnamon Spice Tea at all times.

I’ve been snacking like crazy on these super – sweet mandarin oranges I found at Trader Joe’s.

02.26.13a

I’ve been treating myself – very occasionally since it’s not exactly cheap – to some Blenheim Hot Gingerale (by “Hot” I mean super spicy, not heated).

02.26.13b

It’s woefully hard to come by if you don’t live in the Carolinas, but Fresh Market carries it here.  If you have a Fresh Market or you’re south of Virginia, keep an eye out.  It’s totally worth its weight in gold. The spicy kick really clears up the sinuses!

And finally, I’ve been incredibly lucky to get a whole fridge full of Susan’s Roasted Garlic Chicken Soup.

02.26.13c

I’ve eaten this every day I’ve been sick and it has been a godsend.

Today I am feeling a whole lot better, but the weather is about the worst it can be: cold and massively rainy.  With my luck, this will be the day / night the goats decide to kid.

Cross your fingers they wait for at least somewhat better weather.


Tagged: Farm, food