Friday, November 10, 2017

NOPE hat take 2, Stitch & Bitch spinning

I was excited to try my hand at both fair isle and intarsia with this pattern for a hat that says NOPE. I followed the pattern exactly, and this was the result:


Okay, my head is small, but seriously? The upper part before the brim comes all the way down to my eyebrows. And the brim, even folded in half, would cover half my head on its own. So I took out the bottom row of hearts, shortened the brim, and made a few other minor changes. Take 2 is much better.


Chase reminded me about the Stitch & Bitch at her store every Thursday evening. I used to go sometimes when I lived in Oakland, and I miss it. Yesterday I didn't have any evening clients so I decided to make the drive down. Rachel joined me at the store. Instead of working on my endless queue of knitting and crochet projects, I brought my neglected spinning wheel and continued with the pink/yellow/purple/silver merino and silk roving. I've always called it "My Little Pony roving" and multiple other people referred to it as "unicorn hair." It took about ten minutes to get back into the groove of spinning, and a few hours before I was back up to my previous speed. The time flew by. I finished filling up a second spindle. One more to go, and then I'll ply all three together.

I told Rachel not to let me buy anything unless I had a very good reason. Well, Chase had yarn spinners/lazy susans, which I've been coveting for months. I've been having major problems with my yarn twisting up as I knit when using center-pull balls. So I had to get one.


I also picked up another little project bag. It was too funny to resist.


Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Sustainably produced rambouillet roving

My friend Chase gave me a 4 oz ball of gray fine rambouillet roving from Lani's Lana as thanks for inviting her to chicken butchering day. She said that she remembered that I really like gray, which I found touching. It is locally produced in northern California and Nevada, by shepherds who practice regenerative agriculture. Perfect!


Monday, November 6, 2017

Chicken butchering day

Rachel & Eli and Chase & Andrew all came over to help dispatch and process most of the cockerels. We butchered the 5 standard males (Red Sex Links or Leghorns?) that had been freebies and 6 of the bantams (2 Silkies, 2 Golden Sebrights, and 2 Red Pyles). I'm keeping the Cuckoo Maran that was supposed to be a pullet, the beautiful black and red Old English Game, the Black Japanese, and one of the Golden Sebright cockerels. They are just so cute that I wanted to keep a few around. There is one more Silkie that I'm unsure about, but s/he has been spared for now.

Eli got the honorary first kill, then Rachel and I split up the rest. The bantams were so small that they slid right through the cone, so she chopped their heads off. There was a moment when I laid out a bantam for her, holding its head still in one hand and the body in the other, and she raised the cleaver, and I had the thought that she might miss and take my fingers off. She didn't, of course, but I had a panicked moment as the bird spurted blood all over me, and.... she cut off the rest of their heads by herself while I helped Chase and Andrew with plucking. I'm not sure if that counts as passing or failing the trust fall.

From set up to clean up, everything was done in 3 hours, and we had a good time. We all went out for lunch together afterwards.

I'm pretty sure that once the current pullets are old enough to lay and be let out of their coop (and therefore have access to the other girls' layer feed), I will use the second coop to raise broilers. We all desire a mechanical plucker, though.

The keeper bantams were roosting in the tree that overhangs the chicken area last night. Before we started butchering, we chased them down in the run and clipped their wings. This evening they were back in the tree. Damn it.