In March 2017 I made a pull apart cake for my eldest. She picked out a cat picture (not any of our cats), and I used an airbrush with food dye to paint white frosting on cupcakes. The ears are massive mounds of fondant.

In March 2017 I made a pull apart cake for my eldest. She picked out a cat picture (not any of our cats), and I used an airbrush with food dye to paint white frosting on cupcakes. The ears are massive mounds of fondant.

I’ve been collecting patterns from Wool & Pine that use 1×1 color work. I put my toe in the water using scrap acrylic yarn: a variegated green/tan/black as the main color and then sun and sky colors (blue, white, gray, yellow, orange) for the secondary colors.

I love the look of the broken horizontal stripes, it isn’t hard, but it isn’t fast. I don’t like the large number of yarn ends and dealing with them at the end of the project. Full disclosure, on this project I didn’t neaten them, just tied knots and left the fringe inside. I
t does make a thicker fabric, which isn’t ideal here in Texas. I do want to use the technique for a larger project, but ideas are still brewing.
I’ve had a few interesting interactions caught on the trail cam of unexpected pairs.




I have my trail cam set to take photos every three seconds when there is movement, so the shots on either side of the ones I selected above told me the story. I chose the most representative photo to share.
From this set of data, it seems the raccoons are top, then opossums, and then the cats come in last, giving the others wide berth.

Cat family dynamics are interesting in my neighbor’s colony. In the picture above, the calico in the lead is the momma cat, and the two behind her are her adult kittens. This is a typical scene, with her leading and her brood not far behind. They have all been fixed, and maybe that has something to do with the easy going attitudes.
Here is an amusing trail cam capture. I’m sure the fight wasn’t funny, but the frozen chase is an unusual find.

There were no photos on either side of this one with these two cats, so I assume the chase was all that was within the camera’s field. It is set up to take photos every three seconds, so those cats were indeed high-tailing it.
I’m surprised that I don’t see more chases and fights on the trail cam, honestly.