We are trying lawn alternatives to see what will thrive with little intervention and maintenance. The clovers survived the deep freeze much better than the St Augustine grass (I hate St Aug and am not sad to see it go). I am trying some creeping thyme in one of the bare patches to see if it will take and hold. It does need to stay moist until it has germinated, and I am terrible at remembering where I’ve seeded what, so I used the technology at my fingertips to snap a picture and mark it up so I had record of where I need to water.
Picture of seed packet with a pink outline to mark where I spread the seeds
There are many butterflies in my life right now. Butterflies of weft yarn for weaving, and now butterflies of spun yarn while spinning. I haven’t seen the living kind yet, and it will be interesting to see what the deep freeze did to our insect population.
Butterflying spun single around thumb and forefinger while walking (holding the spindle for the picture only)
I think this is another advancement in my spinning. Before, I didn’t understand the why of the butterfly. I would spun an arm length, then wrap it up on my spindle. I was able to keep tension on the yarn the whole time to keep it from kinking. The butterfly comes in when you are able to spin more than an arm length. As the spindle nears the ground, and my hand is high in the air, wrapping the yarn around two fingers takes up the extra length under tension and allows me to wrap more around the spindle without troublesome twists.
To solve our cat butt on the puzzle problem, we added a shoe box to the puzzle table. We still need to cover the puzzle with poster board when we aren’t working in it, but this seems to appease her highness.
Shoe box offering/bribe to keep the cat off the puzzle pieces
So I finished my single ply over two walks, then was left with a question: can I walk and ply? With the double ended cop method I can! Not really surprising; it is easier to do a two ply than spin a single. There is no drafting and less dropping (yup, I’ve dropped the drop spindle a couple times on the walk!) The cop fits well in my left hand, and I keep one finger between the strands to keep the twist from running down into the wad of yarn. I draw out an arm length of two strands, then flick the spindle clockwise to ply. When the twist is where I want it, I wrap the yarn around the spindle, do a half hitch at the top, and go again.
Picture taken mid-step while the twist worked into the ply
I do need to be careful with my hand position. I tend to let the spindle hang from my longest finger because it is convenient. I have to consciously add some fingers, since walking through the neighborhood with my middle finger raised high sends the wrong message. Although as I approach the middle of the yarn, it does get a bit knotty.
Cop of two ply merino wool, completed in two walks
Our temperatures soared into the 80s (Texas weather pretending the whole week of sub-zero temperatures didn’t even happen), so the dogs got a bath. Missy the puppy is not a fan of the bath, but handles it outside better than in the utility sink. And after the bath she is so fluffy, soft, and glossy!