Monday, March 14, 2011
what i did on my winter vacation
Apparently I took a little blog vacation this winter. I think that perhaps the vacation is over and it's time to peek my nose out again.
Now that I'm emerging from my hibernation den, it seemed like I ought to report on what I've been doing since we last visited, when I was baking a large number of apple cakes. Here's the list:
Sprucing up the garden
I made these two lovely raised beds out of cedar. Aren't they nice? (Don't look too closely). I'm a horrible carpenter, and I don't have a saw, so I had to rely on the lumber place to cut the boards down for me, and then I did a rather amateur job of putting them together. The boards were all rather wildly off the 4-feet-zero-inches target, so the boxes are crooked and overlapping and look like they were built by second-graders in shop class. But hey, they're mine, they're full of dirt and now there are even little seedlings growing in them, so I'm satisfied. Perhaps we will finally be able to grow a carrot longer than 1.5 inches!
Knitting (a little bit)
I'm not sure how it's happening, but I seem to become a slower knitter by the day. I've always been on the slow side, but now I can't seem to find more than 15 minutes at a time to knit anything. Half a row is about all I can seem to generate in one sitting, which makes for a pretty pokey pace. I made the mittens above for my sister's birthday in January, and after that made the pretty sweater being modeled by the Little Pea at the start of this post. Now I'm working on a spring cardi for her, which has not progressed much despite an enthusiastic start. I have tons of design sketches just waiting for someone (me??) to put yarn and needles together and make them real. Did I really used to crank out a design every month or two? Who was that masked woman?
reading (a lot)
Since having a child, I seem to have become a super-reader. I can kill a 1,000-page novel in the time it takes most people to read the Sunday newspaper. I don't just read one book. If I like a book, I go out and get everything that writer has ever published and read them all, in chronological order. I'm currently working my way through A.S. Byatt's back catalog, to my great satisfaction. What a joy her prose is. And I am in love with all of her characters (except the ones I hate, but I really really hate them, in a deeply joyful way, like hating Duke's basketball team or Sarah Palin).
Chasing a rambunctious toddler.
I can't believe the Little Pea is going to be 2 in just a couple of months. She is a lot of fun, and a little bundle of energy.
There are chickens in my house.
This picture was taken about three weeks ago, when the chicks were sweet, cuddly, adorable little fluffballs who hardly knew how to scratch yet. Now they are ungainly adolescents who are overcrowding their dog crate, eating copious amounts of chicken chow and pooping nonstop. All this in my back room. The room where our kitchen table and my desk are. We have a small house. I'm not sure how much longer I can handle the indoor chicken arrangement. Soon they will have enough feathers, and it will be warm enough, for them to go live outside in the chicken coop. Will that happen before HWWLLB and I run out of patience and roast them for dinner? Only time will tell.
And finally... I made a Facebook page for f.pea. Please go Like it! I'm thinking that I might send the first 50 likers a nice surprise. But I have no idea what it is yet. Maybe it will be an adolescent chicken.
They grow like weeds don't they? Almost 2... wow! My girlie is 2 and 4 months.. oh my.. so I know what you mean!! Love you garden boxes.. even if they aren't perfect! Like you said they will do the trick!!
ReplyDeleteWell, I like you on FB but please don't send me an adolescent chicken!
ReplyDeletei'm with pdxknitterati above! (also like you on FB, fyi)
ReplyDeleteThis was an interesting mixture of things in your post! I can't believe the Little Pea is nearly two.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure my cats would LOVE an adolescent chicken... samm
welcome back!
ReplyDeleteI wish Palin played for Duke cuz i would do sum serious hat'n on that!
ReplyDeleteas far as what happened to that masked woman who could crank out knitting patterns every week? The answer is in the paragraph two down, little pea! You still amaze me with what you are able to accomplish! Welcome back!
ReplyDeleteHope you're still hanging in there with the chickens! I am sure that it will be worth it when you have your own free-range eggs every day!
ReplyDeleteYour reading regime sounds wonderful. Have you tried reading and knitting at the same time (slows down both unfortunately!)
I love watching the photos of your little buddy! It seems he's enjoying the winter isn't he?
ReplyDelete