December 2009

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Coming home after a splendid trip, I slept for days.  Good thing too because my teaching schedule to come was full and I needed to rev up for it! I was happy to return to Mountain Knits and Pearls in East Stroudsburg, PA, where I taught Gansey Techniques, Twined Knitting and Latvian Writers. In addition to being a great yarn shop, it is also a bead shop. In October, I returned (after 14 years!) to Whitehorse in the Yukon, to teach the Northern Fibres Guild again.  I didn't see the northern lights or take a dog sled ride like I did last time, but I got to see Real Live Musk Oxen.  Oh yes!  Another thing checked off the Bucket List!  My friend Wendy took me up to the Yukon Wildlife Preserve to look around.  This is the office, but there are other buildings on the property where they have classes in milder weather. As Wendy and I approached the huge area where the Musk oxen were, she warned me not to get too close to the animals.  She showed me how the fencing was doubled!  If the oxen felt threatened, they could rip through one layer, and maybe two.  So I had to stay 15 feet away from the fencing and of course I didn't have a zoom on my camera. (Yes, it's my darn iPhone again, with my good camera safe at home!) It was frustrating to only get this close, when I wanted to run up and hug them!  They are SO CUTE!  Not that they would have appreciated that. The boys were in one pasture, and the girls and babies in another, far, far away. The Preserve also has caribou (below), moose, and other animals.... This friendly little mountain goat was begging for me to take him home.  Sigh. The trail that connects all the pasture lands is a couple miles long and Wendy and I didn't go all the way around the loop.  It was cold! Whitehorse has changed since I was there last time.  It seems to have "grown up" a bit, having more infrastructure than before, such as a stellar sports arena for the community.  I enjoyed my time in the Yukon and remembered many of my students from the last time I taught there. Going home, I got an email from the Kalundborg Museum in Denmark where I had first visited in 1997 to study the amazing Skrå-trøje.  Some of you reading this may have taken my two-day workshop on this sweater.  This is the 100th anniversary of the museum and they were celebrating by putting the Skrå-trøje on display finally!  And they had requested my little sweater sampler to show alongside the original!  I was so proud!  But since the one I actually made had been stolen the year before, I sent along one from one of my great students who had kindly donated hers to me.  (Thanks Sabrina!) I wish I could have made it to the opening. Then, what a rush of towns, guilds, and classes!  I returned to the Rochester Knitting Guild and saw old friends there, drove up to Montreal for another happy weekend, taught for three and a half days at Stitches East in Hartford–just a short drive from home!  Then I hopped on a plane to teach in California and Oregon.  I had never been to Ottawa before.  It is a grand city and the government buildings are beautiful! Earlier this month, I drove to Northampton, Mass to teach at Webs--a most dangerous place to work if you are on a budget!  I remember the first time I went there, after hearing people rave about the yarns, I wandered around and thought it was indeed a very nice store, but I wasn't feeling hysterical about it.  It was only on my second trip there that I found out that the huge back room that was the same size as their enormous sales floor, was open to the public and everything was discounted back there! I made up for my lack of enthusiasm on the previous trip. _________________________________________________________ So now I am home.  For the first time in probably ten years, I don't have to fly somewhere for over two months.  I have lots of projects in mind to work on, but I am also taking some needed rest, baking bread, reading, and watching silly movies.  Tomorrow I am going to a friend's house to learn how to make cheese. I am looking forward to a new year full of promise.  Full of trips.  I'll be in Italy in June and in the UK most of August.  Still pinching myself. May you all be peaceful, happy, safe, self-aware, and free.  Enjoy your lives and treasure your family and friends, your own creativity.  Happy New Year!

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August I taught for over a week at Margaret Klein Wilson's lovely annual retreat in nearby Dummerston, VT.  It is such a privilege to be there with all those great knitters, eating the best food (in part, thanks to Josie who treated us to Puerto Rican flan (twice!) and Pernil).  We laughed and knitted our way through several Maine mittens! Barely had the boxes been moved into my new place, when it was time to fly to The Netherlands for the cruise!  Nancy Marchant, who lives in Amsterdam, met me and Nancy Bush at the airport.  We played for 3 days, eating out as much as possible!   Be on the lookout for Nancy Marchant's new book on knitting Brioche (no, not the bread, silly!):  Knitting Brioche: The Essential Guide to The Brioche Stitch.  Published by North Light Books, it is now available on Amazon! Here we are eating delightful Dutch pancakes.  Mmm, very fattening... Nancy M. had let a few knitters know that Nancy B. and I would be in town, and what started out as an intimate get-together turned into a formal presentation of our respective knitting interests.  I was amazed that over 40 knitters showed up!  It was gratifying to see that our work is known and appreciated beyond the US border. Read the rest of this entry »

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Last time I wrote here, it was actually April!  I think it's really true that as you get older, time starts flying by faster and faster.  Or maybe I was just REALLY busy this year.  I was so surprised to see that this is only the third post of the year!  Geez!  Well, I'll bring you all up to date on a year that surpassed MY expectations. June To finish up about Squam, that fabulous fiber event in New Hampshire, it was wonderful.  I wanted to share some of my photos.  I can't tell you how great it was sitting on the porch every night on the lake listening to the loons make their lovely, mournful calls. Then, up in the morning to walk through the woods to my class room and enthusiastic students! The food was even good! I mean it!  Here is one of my classes in front of the cute building where we worked. One evening there was a bonfire, a singer, and.... Jess from Ravelry! The best news yet is that I am going back this coming year (June 2-6) teaching two new workshops: Latvian Fingerless Mitts:

 

Learn the scalloped edge, Herringbone Braid, and knitting with two, three, and four yarns in a round! Twined Knitted Fingerless Mitts: Learn a Twined Knitting Cast-on in two colors, all the basic stitches, reading the charts,  plus a cool ("Crooked") thumb gusset. You can go to the Squam website to register for classes.  Full information and details for the 2010 sessions will be posted there on January 4th.  I hope to see some of you in class! _________________________________________________ July The bad news is that in July, I had to move.  My landlord wanted to move home, and who could blame her for wanting to be back in her charming cabin on the side of a mountain?  But I cried for two months, especially when I had to sell my beloved wood cookstove--no room at the new place for it. Still, I am blessed that I found a cute little apartment in town with very little maintenance and a whole lot easier to heat.  I am warm this winter!!!  YAY! Stay tuned for Part 2.
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