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This episode is sponsored by my Longaberger Home Business, Quince & Co and Knit 4 Together.
Quince & Co wool yarns are sourced and spun in the US.
Known in the trade as "territory wool," our wool comes from Merino,
Rambouillet, and Columbia-based sheep that roam the ranges of Montana and
Wyoming. All our wool and wool-blend yarns are spun in New England mills with
venerable histories. By sourcing our wool in the US and manufacturing our yarn
locally, we minimize our carbon footprint. Find Quince wool and the other
Quince fibers at www.quinceandco.com.
Knit 4 Together
is a knitting and fiber shop in Dunlap IL just north of Peoria IL. We are a cozy, friendly yarn shop with wall
to wall fiber, especially natural fiber and specialty yarn. Knit 4 Together has
unique yarn bowls made by our own pottery artist. All the notions you will need for your
project are here too.
You can find us at www.knit4together.com
or call 309.243.9499 Come join us for a cozy place to knit. Knit 4 Together is
as much about our yarn as it is about community!
You can find my Longaberger Home Business at www.longaberger.com/paula. Please send me a personal message or visit my
web site to sign up for my customer email list.
You can also find me here:
Ravelry: PrairiePiper Feel free to
include me in your friends.
Instagram: knittingpipeline
Twitter: knittingline
Pinterest: Paula Emons-Fuessle
Pipeliner Notes
Thanks to everyone who was in touch with me in the past week.
I heard from new Pipeliners SarahAA, MissMeredith1, catface85, windpins,
pinstripe, casuey, sandinmysocks, GayleBN, krisluvswool, rambunctiousky,
bridgetmaxine, and Theresa Schaber.
Note from Strid8 who is Astrid. I asked her permission to share this story.
Hi Paula, I was reminded of a funny story when you talked about the
recumbent bike in one of your recent episodes. I was helping out at a friend’s
yarn store when two regular-ish customers were talking about a friend of theirs
who had recently retired. She had gotten a recumbent bike, and was in heaven.
Every day, in the late afternoon, she would get on her bike, audiobook on her
iPod, glass of wine on the side table, and knitting in hand. Sounds like heaven
to me! They went on to relate that this woman was totally knitting obsessed,
saying, with amazement, that “she even knits in restaurants, at the table,
while she’s waiting for her food.” When I didn’t make any comment, one of the
ladies said to her companion “she (meaning me) doesn’t think there’s anything
odd about that”, and turning I me she said “I bet you do that too.” “All the
time!” I responded. They still tease me when they come in the store.
My (long-winded) point is this: the recumbent bike offers great knitting time.
Maybe not for the most delicate or complicated work, but for standard, mindless
knitting, it’s great!
Well, I’ve prattled on enough.
Well, I’ve prattled on enough.
Best,
Astrid
Astrid
That woman is my new heroine and role model!
Beatrix
Potter: A Life in Nature by Linda Lear.
The
Magic Years of Beatrix Potter by Margaret Lane
Events:
Registration is closed for the Knitting Pipeline Spring
Retreat March 14-15, 2014.
- · Mini-skein Swap Thread—a lot of interest Friday night. More info later but it will be very relaxed and I’m sure there will be plenty of Magic Cakes in the making there.
We should reach 1 Million downloads
when this episode is released! Thank
you!
Nature Notes
I want to share with you the view from my window today. It is so beautiful out there and I tried to
capture a bit of it for my Instagram followers but it never quite makes the
mark. The snow is falling steadily but
gently and has been for the past 3 and a half hours. There are so many cardinals and other birds
vying for their spots on the feeder. I’ve
estimated there are at least 30 cardinals within sight right now. An occasional blue jay flashes blue and black
as he finds a spot on the platform feeder.
A Red bellied Woodpecker looks for food on the locust tree. Below the
feeder there are at least 20 smaller birds feeding including the dark eyed
juncos we talked about lst week, goldfinches (also on the niger seed feeder),
tree sparrows, and fox sparrows. A fox
sparrow, the largest of the sparrows came right up to the window a few minutes
ago. These sparrows have a funny way of
scratching in the snow. They have a
heavily striped breast with a spot in the center, a rusty cap, and rusty
tail. One fox squirrel and two gray
squirrels are also eating at the base of the feeder.
We broke a record cold this week along with a lot of other
locales. It was -13 in Peoria. Yesterday, (Thursday) we reached 34 F which
is the first day in February that the temperature was above freezing.
It is still good eagle watching weather. I took a group of ladies down to the East
Peoria Steak & Shake. At first we
didn’t see any bald eagles but suddenly one flew right towards the window where
we were sitting and landed in the tree right above us. The ladies were so excited I thought we might
scare him away but he was nonplussed. He
kept his back to us so I didn’t get the greatest photos.
In backyard bird news there are more birds singing their
mating and territorial calls. The
cardinals have joined the chickadees and tufted titmouse. Last week when I talked about the Dark-eyed Junco
I forgot to say the scientific name which is Junco hyemalis. I’m thinking
of trying to memorize the scientific names again. Maybe we will take one bird per week and see
how that goes. For now let’s remember
Junco Hyemalis.
Crossing a bare
common, in snow puddles, at twilight, under a clouded sky, without having in my
thoughts any occurrence of special good fortune, I have enjoyed a perfect
exhilaration. I am glad to the brink of fear.”
― Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nature=
― Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nature=
Needle Notes
I knit another garland of hearts.
Sock Yarn
Blanket by Shelley Kang
·
·
Domino knitting is modular knitting but all
modular knitting is not domino knitting.
·
Modular Knitting can be any shape that is
replicated and put together to shape a garment.
Hexipuffs for The Beekeepers Quilt is an example of modular knitting.
·
There is a red ball of yarn in upper right corner that shows where I started for Ravellenics. I work from right to left across a row although it does not have to be done that way. |
Added in
- · Auntea
- · Nanaelliott
- · Dpeach
- · Quiltnknitnut
- · Fun4tracy
- · Chessie
- · Aizome
- · Funky
- · Fernie
- · KathyG
- · TheLostGeek
- · Elisann
- · FloridaKelly
- · Sillynilly
- · Serenitty
- · JoanieV
- · LPStarr
- · AnotherCraftyGirl
- · Traci Frederick
- · Kay116
- · Prairiegl
- · LoelKim
- · Gumbygoogoo
- · Twinsetjan
- · Jaxie985
- · Peaceof Yarn
- · Goodstuff
- · VTcrafter
- · DeniseHarro
- · Enw001
- · Crochetster
Ralph Waldo Emerson
“the snow-banks melt, and the face of the earth becomes
green before it, so shall the advancing spirit create its ornaments along its
path, and carry with it the beauty it visits, and the song which enchants it;
it shall draw beautiful faces, warm hearts, wise discourse, and heroic acts,
around its way, until evil is no more seen.
Have a great week, haste ye back, and hold your knitting
close.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteSo excited to hear my yarn is in your blanket!
ReplyDeleteI just love how you keep going on field trips to Steak & Shake!! Your story of the waitress saying there were no eagles reminded me of our last snowy owl hunt. Just don't give up, and an eagle might just fly up to the window to you!
I laughed out loud when I heard Astrid's story! In restaurants is only one of the strange places we bring our knitting!! The restaurants is really one of the more normal places we take our knitting!!
Your comment about "jumping reality" made me laugh too!!
Blessings,
Susanna/Funky
I keep meaning to ask...how do you know the sex of the baldies when they aren't next to each other? If I remember correctly, the only dimorphic trait in bald eagles is that the females are about 25% larger than the males...they both have the white heads & bums when mature. :)
ReplyDelete