Listen here
or use the Flash Player on this site for current and past episodes. Flash
Player is not compatible with Internet Explorer. Try a different browser like
Safari. Or jaunt on over to iTunes
to find the show there.
Knitting Pipeline
is a Craftsy Affiliate. Craftsy offers affordable online classes and supplies. When
you use the link in the sidebar before purchasing I receive a small
percentage of your purchase at no extra cost to you. Craftsy Unlimited is now
called Blueprint. Thank you!
You can also find me here:
Ravelry: PrairiePiper
Feel free to include me in your friends.
Instagram: knittingpipeline
Twitter: knittingline
Pinterest: Paula Emons-Fuessle
In this episode we have Pipeliner Notes, Events, Needle
Notes, Blethering Room and a bit of Nature Notes.
Pipeliner Notes
Welcome to our newest Pipeliners who have said hello to us
on the Welcome thread or to me in a personal message. RamseyQ who is Sherri in
CO, smdwire who is Sherry from MN, ijlondon who is ee-joh-mah, Txhoneybee who
is Melissa in TX and Lupe 31 in Quebec.
Thank you for your star ratings and reviews on iTunes. Knittnlibrarian
on Dec 1.
Events
Links to retreats and registration materials are in the Knitting
Pipeline Retreats Group on Ravelry. There is also a sticky
thread with all upcoming retreat dates.
I am speaking at the Madison WI Knitting Guild on December 10, 2018.
February Retreat
February 15-16, 2019
There will be major changes to this retreat. Nikki, our cook for the past
7 years, moved to Alabama to live near her grandchildren. She decided to move
in the summer. Right decision for her, for sure. This means that the whole food
situation has to be reworked. Also, the church has a new policy that for security
reasons, people cannot stay overnight.
Even thinking about the retreat was getting stressful and I
thought of not having it at all. It’s an enormous amount of work and I’m getting
started late. Then I considered having a truly bare bones retreat. The original
purpose of this retreat was to provide a low-cost retreat that anyone could
afford.
I would love to have your feedback. What I am thinking now
is that Friday Feb 15 will be the Yarn Crawl Fun Day with knitting that evening
at Crossroads. Saturday will be a Knitting with Friends Day and you can go out
for food or bring your own.
Needle Notes
Knit Stars 3.0.
Arne and Carlos. THE BEST!
HΓΈnsestrik
in the 70’s. First letter from Elizabeth Zimmermann to me in March 1977.
I learned to knit in Denmark exactly as they do with one
exception: The Norwegian Purl. I can’t recall where I first learned about this
way of purling. It may have been on one of Arne and Carlos’ videos on YouTube
or on Craftsy.
Advantages:
·
With the Norwegian Purl you do not bring the
yarn to the front of the work. The stitch is worked behind and it seems like a
lot of motion.
·
Tends to be tighter.
I’ve tried it before and decided to try again. I definitely
got the hang of it; however, when knitting on dpn’s I had terrible ladders
which I don’t have with the way I purl.
Lisa at Knit Night learned to knit from her Finnish
grandmother so apparently the Finns can claim this too.
Rodeo Drive
Poncho by Staci Perry in Quince & Co Phoebe Cynus colorway. Took
3.5 skeins. 351 g.
Zigzagular
Socks by Susie White.
Leading Men Fiber Arts Turkey Run
Toes in Dyabolical self striping. Just for fun. I didn’t
have to.
Nature Notes
On Sunday, Nov 25th we had our 5th
snowfall of the season with more snow 2 days later. The first was on October
14. This is so unusual for us. We don’t usually have snow until around Dec 1. On
that Monday I ate lunch with our resident Cooper’s Hawk. You can almost tell
when the hawk is nearby because there is so little activity at the feeders. On
this day he sat so still on the deck railing for quite a long time but the
minute I decided to get my camera for a photoshoot he flew off.
On Saturday Nov 30 we were under a severe weather watch
which turned out to be scary in the early evening. Tornadoes were sighted and
some touched down southwest of us and were heading our way, just as the big F-4
did a little over 5 years ago. I am not a weather alarmist but having been through
a tornado and seeing the damage first hand, you tend to be more cautious.
Bronwyn texted me to see if I was aware of the warning. We get a warning when
there is a tornado…a watch means there is a possibility. With a warning and
tornadoes heading our way, I stayed down in our lower level, watching the
weather on television while my husband watched football upstairs. He doesn’t
watch a lot of football but there was definitely one of us who was being more
cautious than the other. Two hours later the tornadoes had lost their rotation
and were downgraded to severe thunderstorms.
During the wild weather we’ve been having with snow, wind,
and rain, I’ve been watching a large squirrel’s nest not far from the house. It
was larger than most of the nests that dot the upper landscape of the woods. I
don’t know how the squirrels build these nests or get into them because they
just look like wads of leaves. I do see them carrying leaves to stuff into the
messy ball. After each storm the nest has lost leaves and this last one brought
most of it down. There is just a small bunch of assorted leaves and twigs to
mark where this nest had been. I don’t know if squirrels use the same nests
year after year. They seem so carefree that I would expect them to move around
freely but I don’t really know.
The bare trees have a beauty of their own We can see al the
way down to the creek, which was swollen with the snow and rain of the past few
weeks.
Today there are about a dozen or more junco’s feeding in the
grass below the feeder. A tufted titmouse just flow to the feeder. It’s been
quite out there for a little while so it’s good to see some activity. I saw a
Fox Sparrow, the largest of the sparrows here. There are probably more as they
usually are in flocks.
I have a book to share with the naturalists out there. If
you have a friend or family member who enjoys observing nature, this would be a
wonderful gift.
The
Naturalist’s Notebook: An Observation Guide and 5-year calendar-journal. for
tracking changes in the natural world around you. Nathanial Wheelwright and
Bernd Heinrich. October 2017. Story Publishing.
First half of book is how to be a better observer of nature.
Beautifully illustrated in pen and ink, watercolor.
Second half of book is a 5 year calendar so you can track
changes such as the first snowfall or the arrival of hummingbirds in the spring.
5 year format allows you to see from year to year.
A wind has blown the rain away and blown the sky away and
all the leaves away, and the trees stand. I think, I too, have known autumn too
long. e. e. cummings
Read more at: https://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/e_e_cummings_156801?src=t_trees
Read more at: https://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/e_e_cummings_156801?src=t_trees
Blethering Room
Eagle Crest Retreat Trunk Show with Cheryl Beckerich at www.cherylbeckerich.com
She is cherylbeckerich on Ravelry
Drawing for The Craft Beer
Collection in the Knitting Pipeline Group on Ravelry.
In The Pipeline
Dust of Snow
by CuriousHandmade with my DIY Advent Calendar from Eagle Crest Retreat.
1 comment:
Schengen country - in that sense it is very close to the general immigration policy of the European Union (the United Kingdom and Ireland are part of their own separate agreement called (and therefore the Schengen rule is not there apply (although they are both part of the European Union (it should also be noted that the Schengen area also includes non-EU countries). https://www.immigration-residency.eu/real-estate/
Post a Comment