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Suits Him to a T

Sometime in the last month, Rick was asked if he would be interested in becoming the new driver for the 1914 Model T that belongs to the Shafer Museum in Winthrop.  He said yes, but nothing happened until this week.  On Wednesday he got his one and only driving lesson, and today (Saturday) he drove it in the Winthrop ’49er Days parade, with me riding shotgun (actually operating the “ooga-ooga” horn with my foot….).

The first challenge was getting it started.  Turns out the former driver, who “trained” Rick on Wednesday, had charged the battery yesterday and forgot to hook it back up again.  Once we figured that out, she started right up.  This car has no gear shift.  You use a brake and a couple of foot pedals.  I still don’t quite get it, but hey, we didn’t run anybody down and it kept running the entire time.

Here we are waiting in line for the parade to start:

I had some time to walk back down the line and check out the other “entries.”  This is a very home-grown affair, with both groups (e.g. the Girl Scouts, in front of us) and businesses represented.  For example, the septic services; yes, that girl on the far left IS wearing a dress covered in toilet paper!

Then there was this one, which seemed to be promoting camping in some way:

A cool old 1937 John Deere tractor towing a float whose purpose I could not discern:

And lot of horses, wagons, mountain men, etc.

Once the parade started at 11 am, we were greeted by the sight of quite a crowd in downtown Winthrop:

Wave wave, smile smile, ooga-ooga.

Here’s my friend Diana M cheering us on from the sidelines:

Well, it was really a lot of fun and I guess we have more events coming up.  I hope we can just go take her out for a spin sometime!

The arrowleaf balsamroot, perhaps the signature flower of the Methow Valley and known locally as “the sunflowers”, are finally in full bloom up in our part of the valley.  Also, last week was the peak of the serviceberry bloom, which is a medium sized shrub that is ubiquitous in the valley – the flowers are white and the masses of blooming shrubs along the roadways and hillsides are quite beautiful.

Our Tuesday hiking group went up some old ranch roads northwest of Pearrygin Lake yesterday.  The views were stunning, even from where we parked:

How green is my Valley

There was a heavy snowstorm in the Cascades Sunday night and into Monday, so the mountains had a fresh coat of new snow.  The hillsides in the valley are carpeted with new green grasses and flowers.  It won’t stay this green forever, but it sure is beautiful now!

It was windy and cold so we had to bundle up:

Sunflowers and vistas in abundance:

Three of us explored up the road past the lunch/turnaround spot, hoping to find a route that led over the hill to another network of roads, but it petered out on us.  On the way back down we saw dozens and dozens of mountain bluebirds in the fields around us.  I had my binoculars along so I could get a really close look at them.  Then I wished I had the big camera with the telephoto lens, instead of my little pocket-sized digital camera!

Last week our local guild, Methow Valley Spinners & Weavers, experienced a long-awaited event.  We brought in a weaving instructor from Bremerton named Robyn Spady for a two-day workshop.  Here’s the link to Spady Studios.  The workshop we chose was “Extreme Warp Makeover” and everyone was very pleased.  For one thing, it was not a “round robin” format in which you move from loom to loom.  Rather, we all warped our own loom, allowing for some creativity while staying within the guidelines.  We were able to choose one of three threadings:  overshot, rosepath twill, or huck lace.  Then over the course of the 2 days we learned how to get different effects from changing tie-up and treadling, or using different wefts, all using the same warp and threading.  She had 15 different variations we could try, and an excellent and comprehensive handout which is really a complete, spiral bound manual.

Some worked on table looms:

and some worked on floor looms, but to avoid constantly getting down on the floor and changing the tie-up, we used a direct tie-up (treadle 1 to harness 1, treadle 2 to harness 2, etc) so it was really the same as using a table loom except we got to use our feet:

Robyn was an excellent and organized teacher, and also had a great sense of humor and was a lot of fun to be around.

Here’s some pictures of cloth as it was being produced on various looms:

Lillie's

Kaliope's

Kira's

Kay's

Sara's - always so creative!

I went back in on Friday and finished up my piece, which was woven on the Rosepath Twill threading.  Here is how it looked when I took it off the loom.  I cut it lengthwise with about 1/3 on one side and 2/3 on the other side, serging the edges, and now I am washing the bigger piece, so I will have a sample of how the cloth was before and after washing and pressing.

I don’t usually post really personal information on the blog, but my small readership consists mostly of friends and family, and I think it is appropriate to let you all know that my Mom, Betty Carr, passed away last Sunday night.  She would have been 89 this August.

I find it helps me to look back and remember earlier days and the good times we had as a family, often centered around adventures in the outdoors – camping, hiking, boating, summers at the beach.

I have a lot of pictures but not many are digitized.  But I did find this one, which my friend Sybil used in a video she put together for my 60th birthday last year.  That’s me on the right, my sister on the left.  Not sure who is in the background, but surely my Dad took the picture.

Mom and the family in the 1950's

So this is how I like to remember my Mom (well, not with the cigarette – she and Dad quit smoking a long, long time ago!)

Patterson Mt.

Last Sunday we took a long rambling walk up along the north side of Patterson Mountain, which is what we see across the hay fields from the new house.   On the other side of the mountain is found Patterson Lake, which you pass on the way up to Sun Mountain Lodge.  We drove around to “Tiny Town”, a local name for a collection of buildings on Twin Lakes Rd, next to a parking spot for the Methow Trail.  We walked up the trail (which we have skiied down in winter many times) until we came to a spot where we could see our house from up above.

That’s the Methow River out beyond the house – on the other side of Wolf Creek Road.  Wolf Creek flows into the Methow about a mile up the road from where we are.

When we got up to the top, instead of taking the trail back down (or onward to Patterson Lake), we followed an old road that headed back across the side of north Patterson Mt.  There were trees and branches down at the beginning, and it was signed for “no bicycles”, but it didn’t say “keep out” either, so what the heck.  There were the remains of an old aqueduct along this road (twisted metal pipe, plus some of the older wooden pipe that was held together with metal rings).  Not sure how old, or what it’s original purpose was… kind of intriguing!  We finally found ourselves up above a road we recognized that leads down to Twin Lakes Rd, so worked out way down through an old abandoned orchard, down the road, and then back along Twin Lakes Rd to Tiny Town.  It was a nice long 2-hour ramble and fun to explore a little in our new neck of the woods.

On the home front, I am working on my big loom down at Benson Creek, putting on 50 yards of rug warp to get ready for another round of rag rugs.  The new tensioner I bought last year from Macomber Looms is a big improvement.  It has a comb mounted on the front that really guides the threads onto each 2″ section of the sectional warp beam – especially if you follow the directions and thread it so some of the threads are doubled up in the comb, with on overall width less than 2″ in the comb.  That way I had a lot less trouble with the edge threads jumping over the pegs into the adjoining section.

I leave you with a picture from “Tuesday is for Hiking”.  We did a short loop around Risely Lake, out the Gunn Ranch Road in the Rendezvous area.  We saw lots of bluebells and the arrowleaf balsamroot (known locally as “the sunflowers”) are beginning to bloom.  The serviceberry bushes are just coming into bloom in the valley now, too – beautiful!

Benson Creek FSBO

Well, the webpage is up (see link in sidebar).  The signs are up.  The ad starts in the Methow Valley News this week.  I posted an ad on Seattle Craig’s List this morning.  The place is clean and tidy with some fresh paint, and I have to say it looks pretty darn good!

Home and Shop with 6 acres on Benson Creek – For Sale by Owners….

Bye Bye, Deere Prudence

The somewhat sad fact is that we don’t need a tractor (much less a mowing deck) at the new house up Wolf Creek.  We thought we would wait to see if whoever buys our Benson Creek place would want to buy the tractor, but last week we got a call from the fellow who owns the local lumber yard.  He has a place with 10 acres and has apparently been wanting a compact tractor for a while.  So this past weekend he came and got it.

Rick made one last raid on the giant mulch pile to deliver mulch to the beds we cleared last fall, just before snow:

And then it was loaded onto a flatbed trailer:

But it’s going to a nearby home, and it sounds like we may be able to borrow it back some this spring, if needed.

We Rise to the Challenge

We had a huge turnout for the weaving guild meeting yesterday.  It was time for the presentation of the “challenge” project for this year.  I think I mentioned before that it was a little different this time – instead of being a particular weave structure, the idea was to “do something” with a large quantity of rather vintage Bernat Quick Crochet Cotton that was given to the guild some years ago.   At least 25% of the materials we used had to be this yarn, and dyeing was OK.

Here are the original colors, brown and emerald green:

People had more or less kept their projects a secret, so it was really fun to see what we had come up with!

Alison P. had 2 projects.  The first one was a tote bag using the green yarn in the center panel, but she discharged dye from areas by “painting” the yarn with automatic dishwasher liquid, leaving it for an hour before rinsing out, then overdyeing with indigo.  The grey bands are 8/4 cotton.

Then Alison dyed the brown yarn with indigo to get a khaki color.  She used this with some other cottons to make a small towel in Thick and Thin weave with the blocks arranged in an undulating order:

Lucy R. had used the brown yarn “as is” in the warp for some chenille bath towels, which she had given away last year as a gift, so we only got her notes and a picture.  I remember them, though, and they were beautiful!

Cathie L. used the yarns “as is” as warp for some placemats using cotton valance fabric for the weft:

brown warp

green warp

Christina K. used the green cotton “as is” in both the warp and weft for some placemats, but the warp and weft also included several other types and colors of cottolin and cotton:

Kira J. used the brown yarn “as is” in both the warp and weft  for a color-and-weave rayon chenille scarf.  She used 2 colors of chenille, burgundy and orange, and I think the result is outstanding:

Dorothy E. used 8/4 carpet warp in 3 colors for the warp, and both the brown and green challenge colors in the weft, for some overshot pattern hot pads.  They were folded in half with a heatproof material inside, crocheted around the edges.  And they are reversible!  Pretty cool….

Janet L. used some of both colors in this gorgeous rep weave tote, using 1″ strips of cotton fabric for the thick weft and 8/4 cotton for the thin weft:

Susan S. used the challenge yarns along with some cotton flake and lightweight chenille to make towels:

Kay R. made a large bath towel using the green challenge yarn, along with some other cottons and a nylon ribbon, but somehow I didn’t get a picture of it yesterday.  Sorry, Kay!

Sandra W. made point twill placemats using both colors of the challenge yarn alternating in the warp, and some acrylic knitting yarn in the weft.  Then she dyed the mats with evening blue Rit dye after they were completed, which made the brown into more of an olive tone and darkened the green:

Lill W. had 2 projects.  The first was a brightly colored scarf using some of the challenge yarns, and then she really gave herself a challenge and created a small tapestry (never having done tapestry before, plus she dyed all the yarns herself):

Then were a couple of people (like me, with my curtain) who were not finished, but on the way…

As you can see, we had quite the variety of projects come out of this humble and rather uninspiring yarn!

Progress Report

Back from a weekend at the coast, I am holding down the fort while Rick is in Seattle with his mom and sister.  It’s been a busy week.  I went to work on our “for sale by owner” advertising efforts and we hope to get Benson Creek on the market officially by next week.

Things are also progressing on the shop updates.  The crew arrived to work on enclosing the RV parking area to make it part of the woodshop.  In fact, I was on the phone with my mom this morning when the cement truck showed up.  Had to get some pictures for the record (sorry Mom!  didn’t mean to hang up on you quite so fast!)

These cement pours always seem so frenetic.  It’s a race against truck and time, I guess.

I stayed up way too late last night, finishing the handout for my guild challenge project.  We will be presenting our results at the meeting tomorrow.  I used my WeaveIt software to do the threading, tie-up and treadling plans but I only want to use one piece of paper (double sided) so needed to do a lot of manual cutting and pasting to get it to fit.

Then I went into the guild room today and wove some more on the curtain, so I could get pictures of the other two patterns.  The weaving is now more than half done, so I should be able to get it off the loom by next week.

Motif 2 is a checkerboard, but I treadled it 2 times, 4 times, then 6 times in the middle, to experiment with the effects:

Bronson Lace Motif 2

Motif 3 is the result of just doodling using an Excel spreadsheet where I made the cells square.  This is the one where it finally sunk in that I can only design something that is symmetrical around the center block, given the threading:

Bronson Lace Motif 3

I’ll take some pictures of everyone’ s projects at the meeting tomorrow – should be interesting!

Maiden Voyage

I have been working in fits and starts on our guild’s 2010 challenge project, which is to “do something” with some old crochet cotton that our leader, Kay, had in abundance.  The project had to be done at least partially with this yarn, and dyeing was OK.  The original colors were… well, an unlovely shade of brown (in my family, we would call it “camel path brown”), and a bright emerald green.  Yech.

Last summer I over-dyed mine with indigo.  This made the brown into a nice light denim blue, and darkened the emerald green to a teal color.

I had the idea to make a curtain for the bathroom at our guild meeting/weaving room.  Kay met with me in October and got me started on planning a Bronson lace project.  But that’s as far as it got, life has intervened, and now we are supposed to be done and ready to share our results in a week (April 8).  Oh, and I am using my new loom, Mother Mary’s loom, which is currently living at the guild room.  This is the first project I am doing on that loom, hence the “maiden voyage”.

So I got the warp on, alternating colors every other thread, except for 1″ at each edge in the teal:

And today, with Kay’s help, I figured out how to tie up the first pattern and actually got started weaving!

As a knitter, I am used to thinking of lace as having holes in the fabric to make the pattern.  Here, it is actually floats of the weft color on the surface.  But I am learning a lot and am going to plan out some other patterns to use for the rest of the curtain.  It won’t be finished by next week, but I will have the documentation done and pictures of the work in progress.