Sunday morning and I'm
sat at my kitchen table with a lovely cup of tea from Bird and Blend.
I have a bit of a collection so today is Earls Paradise, a riff on
Earl Grey but with exotic fruit. Usually I use this little bit of
time to read an Almanac, do some drawing or Netflix and knit. Work is
still super busy, no suprise as there's a pandemic on, but this
morning there's breaking news that my organisation may go through a
restructuring, seemingly out of the blue. I know I've not been super
into news recently trying to stop feeling overwhelmed, but if there
had been any inkling of this it would have been mentioned at work.
And as a civil servant I should probably stop talking before I get
myself in trouble.
Anyway.
Since I wrote last,
which wasn't years ago but a mere 2 weeks, I've taken the final step
to delete my Ravelry page. Anyone that knows me would probably tell
you I'm pretty indecisive, I don't like doing things that can't be
undone (or pick where I want to shop, or what to have for dinner, or
what time to meet for drinks...) but given the continued ambivalence
towards accessibility, I want to call it violence and aggression
which I know some of the activists who have been very vocal about
this have been experiencing, but it's the indifference that TPTB show
that is just as bad. But then that is just another type of
aggression, and something I'm sure disabled people are unfortunately
used to dealing with. Anyway, it's big and scary and very
disappointing, but that sums up this entire year.
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| FFFS flat lay, how very insta. |
In an effort to build a
bit of knitterly community away from there, I've been really enjoying
the Everyday Knitter group on Mighty Networks. Louise Tilbrook set up
the group on Facebook a few years back and I joined but it was a bit
much to keep up with. The new format is really nice, ad free and it
shows all the things that have happened since you last visited, which
is nicer than the Facebook algorithm. Currently we've got a
knit-a-long (KAL) to celebrate the move, we're mostly knitting one of
Louise's patterns which she kindly made free to the group, the Fuss
Free Festival Shawl, or FFFS. I'm using some yarn I bought from a
local knitters destash, it's from the Witch Fibre Co, who are a new
to me dyer, and it's called Dream Country inspired by The BFG.
Normally when I buy yarn it's in a skein and you can see all the
colours and have a bit of an idea of how it's going to look knitted,
but I've only seen this as a cake so it's a bit of a surprise. I'm
loving it though, and although I did intend for it to be a Christmas
present, it might be a bit hard to part with. What was fun though was
having an official cast on party Monday night, Might Networks has a
chat feature, although knitting and typing aren't things you can do
together easily and there was talk of maybe using Zoom for the next
online event.
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| Gnicki the Gnome to be. |
I'm also trying to keep
up with the
Imagined Landscapes Gnome-along. Where the EK KAL is a
pattern is just a normal pattern we all make together, and you can
see the finished object (FO) before starting, this one is a mystery
or MKAL. I know it's a Gnome called Gnicki, I know the designers
style, and that I needed 4 colours of fingering weight yarn but
that's all I had to go on before buying the pattern. The colours I've
picked for my Gnome was inspired by the summer moutain meadows seen
in the Sound of Music, the designer said they'd chosen some of their
colours to keep the idea of the Gnome being a mountain creature of
ice and snow, but sometimes mountains are covered in wildflowers.
I've used some miniskeins from
Mothy and the Squid, specifically
“Squeaking Silk Moth” (yellow), and “Springtime”
(purple/blue), and some yarn from stash, the white is from Belinda
Harris and the green is the last of my very precious SparkleDuck “And
The Forest Began To Sing”.
Some people really
don't like the idea of not knowing what you're making before
starting, but I quite enjoy it. Maybe it's to do with the
indecisiveness, when I feel like making a hat there are so many hats
out there how to I pick one? Also it's fun seeing a project some
together with lots of other people. So far I'm up to clue 4, I think
clue 6 was released today so best get the needles out.
Food:
No bread from me
recently, and I really should feed Doughsophine the starter, but I
made some cake with greengages that were left at work for people to
help themselves to. Greengages aren't usually commercially available,
I don't think I've had any since Hubs and I found some growing in a
Shropshire lane many summers ago, and before that in my Little Nan's
garden. Some people at work hadn't heard of them before. This is
probably why it was really difficult for me to find a recipe for
greengages in my bookcase, but the River Cottage Fruit Handbook had a
really nice ones for Plum and Hazelnut cake, which became Greengage
and Walnuts because I didn't have any Hazelnuts either. I love using
whole (or half fruit in this case) in cake because it just explodes
in your mouth when you bite into it.
While looking for
recipes I had a flick through Ruby Tandoh's “Flavour”, and I'd
forgotten how many good sounding things there were in there. So now I
have Coconut and (homegrown) raspberry ripple ice cream in the
freezer. I started it yesterday and it took a bit longer to freeze
than I was expecting so I added the raspberry ripple earlier than was
recommended but I had to go to bed and thought doing it this morning
would be too late. Update: just checked and it's frozen solid so this
was the right move.
Books:
I visited my local and
lovely bookshop Toppings the other week and purchased a whole bunch
of books. The first I read was “The Masked City” by Genevieve
Cogman. I accidentally bought the sixth book in the Invisible Library
series first, so I'm slowly getting them in order so I can read that
one. Luckily I really enjoy them, this is the second book of the
series and I just didn't want to put it down. They're fantasy books,
the Invisible Library is set in a pocket universe/dimension that
connects to lots of other world of varying degrees of chaos (under
the influence of fae) or order (influence of dragons). The Library is
there to collect unusual works of fiction from across all these
worlds by sending out Librarians, and the novels follow one
Librarian, Irene, and her apprentice Kai. Magic, fae and dragons, how could I not enjoy it.
I followed this by
reading the Witcher Book “Sword of Destiny”. I'm not a gamer so
only came to the Witcher because of the Netflix show. I enjoy Sci fi
and fantasy, but it's much easier to find sci fi TV and movies than
it is to find fantasy ones (like, proper fantasty a la LotR, not
GoT). I would have thought it easier to make fantasy than sci fi, but
I guess more people like space. I really enjoyed the TV show and
decided to read the books, and I'll be honest they are not exactly
what I was expecting. The Witcher on tv doesn't say much, there's
lots of fighting/killing monsters and sex, the sort of things you
would expect from adult fantasy, and a game series I imagine largely
aimed at men. But through the books (the two I have read anyway),
where Geralt the Witcher is a bit more talkative anyway, there is a
long running thread where he loves one woman, Yennefer, and is
constantly longing for her, but knowing that because of their
individual issues/occupations (witcher=mutant, Yennefer=sorceress)
that they can't be together. I thought it was nice/weird to see in
what I expected to be a more fighty/killy/sexy book.
Still reading the
Philosophy Queens book too, and I might even read a proper philosophy
book or two at some point to enjoy the full work of some of the women
I've learnt about.
Garden:
Not gonna lie, it's
still out there, and has slightly fewer brambles but that's about it.
Apart from the odd courgette that I find, normally once they're huge.
There's been a heat wave, it should be lucky I watered it.
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| How did I miss this? |