Upside of being home in the summer is the fruit arriving at the local farmstands, and I have had to ration myself on blueberries and peaches or I would eat little else. Ditto corn, which is so sweet and fresh you can eat it raw! I am already planning to freeze portions for the winter. Tomatoes are not yet in enough but when the season hits, I'll be ready.
I get my CSA share about every other week, sharing it with three other people and we take turns. Yesterday was one of my weeks, and to my disappointment I seem to always miss the weeks with fennel. I did get parsley, celery, zucchini, eggplant, purple basil, green beans, chard, scallion, and garlic. My share partner got the napa cabbage instead of chard because her stove is disconnected for kitchen remodeling so she could take only things that can be eaten raw. She did get the two bigger zucchini as I got the eggplant. Otherwise we split fairly evenly. We're both going to farmstands for fruit this week.
Since I planned to start the Boneyard Shawl the day I should have left on the cruise, I had time to finish a hat and scarf for charity:
Scarf folded at left is about 66" long. |
Other side of the hat. |
These were made from leftovers of my grandmother's holiday vest from last winter. Lion Brand "Ferris Wheel" in Buttercup. Just a simple 1 sc 1 dc pattern, hat made up on the fly.
I also started a scarf in the Uzume pattern, using some Noro Silk Garden that had been waiting in my stash for something to happen:
She's right - it's pretty in a shaded yarn. |
July Mini-Resolution Update
I did start the shawl on July 11th, the day we were to have set sail from Amsterdam:
The yarn is from Hedgehog Fibres, their merino aran in "Ferrum". Not one of Stephen West's yarns, although I bought it in his shop. And ..... I just wasn't feeling it. It's lovely yarn, quite silky-soft, and the colour glows, but somehow as a shawl it wasn't thrilling me. I kept seeing me wearing it as a vest instead, even though I don't usually wear autumn colours.
So I went back to the yarn I'd purchased in his shop last year, which included a handful of miniskeins from an Amsterdam dyer called Undercover Otter:
I remember having plans to make mittens out of these but have decided the shawl will be a better use. Handily, if I were traveling "for reals", it is a very compact item, even though it is growing quite nicely:
Day 1 |
Day 2 |
Day 3 - Yes, I added a stripe of Colour 2. |
Day 4 - Finished Colour 1. |
Day 5 - On to Colour 3! Currently 12" deep, 24" across top. |
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