Preparing for winter

It was a productive weekend in all sorts of ways, except for the amount of pleasure reading — sorry, Tolkien. But I am slowly making my way through The Two Towers. I’m not to Isengard yet, but a lot of folks are on their way.

Most of the work I did this weekend was in the house. Earlier this year — spring? summer? — I may have mentioned a cedar chest that we acquired when Eldest was able to unlock it for the previous owners. We didn’t necessarily want it, but we couldn’t find anyone we knew who wanted to have it. So we stowed it in the garage until this weekend.

Saturday was the last warm day that southern Wisconsin might have until…May. The high temperature dropped 20 degrees between Saturday and Sunday, and I have to assume that literally everyone I knew was spending Saturday doing those final chores before the approach of late fall and early winter. I can’t verify that because I was at home doing some of those very chores.

I had thought about using the chest in my bedroom, but it was a bit too wide for that. After I spent more time thinking about it, I saw that I could put it at the upstairs landing and use it to hold the extra blankets that we might need in the winter.

The only (!) problem was that the upstairs landing was already completely packed with all sorts of things. I would need to remove and triage all that, as well as vacuum the stairs and landing, before I could put the cedar chest there. Which was…dusty and needed to be cleaned inside and out.

It was a multi-phase process over the whole weekend, but on Saturday we were able to move the chest from the garage to the deck, where it could get a quick cleaning and dusting. While it aired out, I moved everything from the landing, treated and vacuumed the carpet, and started laundering the blankets that were being stored in boxes and bins. Before the sun set, we were able to put the chest in place.

Kind of invisible, isn’t it? That is a LOT of woodgrain. I thought about hanging something up behind the chest to break up the colors, but since there is an overhang that wouldn’t be the easiest thing to do. But I remembered that I had a metal quilt rack I was using downstairs.

And that’s kind of…blah. Maybe I have something else I can put there to break up the woodgrain and create some [calm] visual interest.

That’s more like it.

Since then I have refolded the quilt (which has one made for my grandmother, but not by me) so that it no longer shows a binding on one side and a fold on the other. And it now contains several freshly laundered blankets.

I’m still trying to figure out what to do with everything that had previously been stacked at the top of the stairs. But that’s a matter for another week (or so).


I’ve been doing more steady work on my research project. Right now I’m taking genealogical data gleaned by the prior biographer and using it to fill out family history and five-generation charts. This gives me a better way to visualize the family — or it will, when I can add all the members of the families to my records. The prior biographer had a habit of writing things like “she was about three years younger” or “he came from a large family” without actually specifying the birthdate or the number of siblings in question. I think I’ll need several sessions with the library’s Ancestry account before I can collect all the data that she didn’t share in her book. I realize that she was focused on our mutual research subject and the direct family lines, but I sure wish that I had access to her notes. I want to take a wider and more comprehensive view.

Last week I watched a Zoom webinar about a printing press that was donated to a museum. It had been used for decades in a family printing business, and the owners had kept copies of hundreds of the posters, invitations, and other items they had printed for their community. Recently, some graduate students reverse-engineered the picture of a vibrant multicultural and multilingual (English, Hebrew, Yiddish, and Spanish) community from the events for which printing had been done.

I would like to do the same thing with genealogy to solve some minor mysteries in my research subject’s ancestors. Why were he and his siblings born in a small town in Scotland when his father had lived near London? Well, his mother’s family lived in this small town, and she had two sisters and probably a raft of cousins. Something about the structure of the extended family made this something sensible instead of unusual.


Knitwise, the rows of the Palm Frond scarf have gotten so wide that I only found time to knit full repeats on the weekend days. On both days, I knitted while watching YouTube videos about working with analog planning systems (shoutout to Rachelle In Theory). After knitting two more repeats I measured out the rest of the yarn, and only half the cake is left. But I also have just four 10-row repeats left before I bind off the project. That’s how quickly it’s getting wider. When I wear it, that width will become length… oh, forget it. I’ll just show you a picture.

I was a little bit more diligent at working on the Cottontail scarf this week than I was the week before. In the photo below I have folded the scarf at the halfway point, where I joined the second ball of yarn. Though I didn’t measure the work, you can see that I’m a bit more than 75 percent done. It’s not close-to-done enough to check my stash and see what I might work on next, but it’s close enough that I’ll have a warm scarf to wear while it’s still cold.

My life as a cat

Recently I’ve been catching up on a podcast to which I haven’t listened for over a year. Now that my morning and afternoon commutes have been somewhat lengthened by the lateral journey to Youngest’s high school and back again, I’ve been firing up the Bluetooth speaker (thanks, Sheila!) and listening in for at least thirty minutes a day. The episodes vary in length but average 20-25 minutes each, so I have been clipping through them fairly quickly. I started re-listening about a year further back than I needed to, but it’s been rewarding to hear the episodes again (occasionally hearing [again] the answer to a question I had submitted — which, ironically, which was about what other podcasts I should listen to when I had finally caught up with this one).

This weekend I caught up to where I had left off almost exactly a year ago. A few minutes ago I listened to the last five minutes of an episode I started this morning, which turned out to be largely about, of all things, the philosophy of mathematics and its relationship to Talmud study. And right at the end of the episode, host Xava made the comment, “I can’t live all of the lives that I want to live.”

I may have mentioned one or twice that my house contains the necessary items for living several lives. Since I don’t know yet which life I’ll live, I don’t know yet which items will prove to be necessary and which items I can sell, throw away, or hand off to others. As my offspring make their own decisions, I can reward their decisiveness by letting them raid my stores. Over time, that will help me to narrow my own choices. (Mama can’t go first. That would be rude.)

Do I have enough items to live for a thousand lives before using them up? Not quite. (And would I want to live like The Doctor, outliving everyone I love? No. But I can’t get rid of my Tardis full of time-travel items — no, not yet. Somehow I might find the time to read and watch them all….)

But perhaps, just perhaps, I could narrow my lives down to nine.

There’s a life where I can finally set up my Macseum, creating networks of similarly aged Mac hardware and installing each piece with the optimum operating system. The laser printer and the DeskJet can finally come up from the basement and be used again, and I can write (and print out) stories on everything from a Mac Plus to an iMac or MacBook.

There’s a life where I can learn all the languages I want to learn: Hebrew, Yiddish, Ladino; Spanish; American Sign Language; Latin. And why not French and German and Arabic, too, while I’m at it? Japanese? Afrikaans? Sanskrit? No problem! I remember checking out, when I was in about the fourth grade, a library book about the way basic Chinese characters were created. The character for “house” actually looks like a house, if you know what you’re looking for.

There’s a life where I have the time to read all of the books I have accumulated over the years. Fiction, essays, nonfiction — all of them, in any order I want.

There’s a life where I draw, paint, and just plain create all the things that flash through my mind. I take my own photographs, develop my own pictures, and design the house I live in.

There’s a life in which I do nothing but write, with pencils, pens, fountain pens, typewriters, and computers.

There’s a life where I travel the world, using my languages and my art to get around and meet people, discover and tell their stories, and find out who I am.

There’s a life where I cook my way through every cookbook I own, and I master the techniques of Jacques and Julia, of Anthony Bourdain and Bert Greene, of the Top Chefs and the anonymous cooks representing a thousand years of Chinese cuisine. I bake every loaf and cut out every cookie, and there are fresh loaves of challah on every Shabbat.

There’s a life where I’m just the wacky old lady who lives next to the middle school, pointing my finger at the kids who struggle to pedal the ill-fitting hand-me-down bikes of their older siblings. “Come here,” I say. “Let me fix that for you. You can pick it up on your way home.” While they’re in class I check the brakes, adjust the gearing, put the seat at the proper height, fill the tires to the right pressure, and lube the chain. I get to make something better, and they get to have something that works better — something that might bring them freedom rather than frustration.

That sums up eight lives, leaving only one in which to do everything else I’d like to do. Is the ninth life the one in which I knit, crochet, make quilts, rehabilitate owls, foster cats, dogs, horses, and alpacas, research genealogies, and finally learn to play and write music for the piano, guitar, and accordion? When do I study geometry, astronomy, and mathematics? When do I set up my invention lab? When do I meditate and do my yoga? And when can I just be?

I may need to rethink this plan.


Knitwise, there hasn’t been a stitch of work going on. Knitrino did recently email me about my last chance to purchase a pattern for knitting a smol apatosaurus. It’s tempting, I tell you.

How it’s going

Recently I seem to have started several new projects. Maybe it’s time for updates on them.

Hebrew homeschool: Every week I have been writing out the first phrase or sentence of the Torah portion in Hebrew — first the entire phrase and then word by word on separate lines in my notebook. The next step is the transliteration and then the translation. After that I record any specific reading or studying I’ve done during the week. I have to say that I’ve been doing just the bare minimum here since the first week. But I have noticed that it’s easier to read the Hebrew when I glance at it during my Daf Yomi time. So there’s that.

Graduate school: the final project, a group project, is almost all that is left. I know what I want to contribute to it, and I keep telling myself that I have plenty of time to do my research and prepare my materials. There is also a book to read; it has eleven chapters and I have read three. If I read one chapter about every three days, which seems to be within the realm of possibility, I’ll stay on schedule.

Journaling: I have been keeping up with entries in two journals every day. This does not include my bullet journal, which I stopped using a couple of months ago and is now, in fact, MIA. For next year I have ordered (and received!) a gorgeous preprinted planner and a fountain pen and ink to go with it.

so 2022
so 2023

I’m trying not to start too many new projects, but sometimes you just have to play to your strengths.


Knitwise, I haven’t cast on for either of the two projects for which I purchased patterns. I did, however, download a free pattern for knitting a potato. Yes, a pattern for a potato. And I didn’t cast on for that one, either (keeping my streak alive).

What I did do was gently make some progress on the Packer scarf as I cleared Formula 1 sessions from the DVR and watched the final Grand Prix of the season. Just 105 days to go before the 2023 season starts in Bahrain!

I call it gentle progress because the tension on this project is loose and I don’t want to tighten it up. So when the race got, as my former boss Terry Thompson used to say about a tension-filled magazine issue, “a little too exciting,” I had to put down the project until I could knit calmly.

It’s a rather meditative knit anyway.

That’s how it looked on Saturday night. Next, here’s how it looked a full 24 hours later:

That’s about 10 ridges, or 20 rows, of progress. You can see by how much of the green yarn is left that I’m going to be plugging along on this for a while. When this skein of green yarn is used up, I’ll be at the halfway point. Unless I decide to put on some fringe. I suppose that I will decide for/against fringe when I get to the almost-halfway point. I just weighed the balance of the green skein, and I have 52 of 83 grams of yarn left. I can weigh the balance again when the scarf is 45 inches long and make some more calculations.

What do you think? Fringe or no fringe?

and just like that, it was hot chocolate season

This week was beautiful. Everyone I saw talked about how beautiful it was. The perfect autumn day, so bright, so lovely. The sky was begging to be photographed for a calendar page. Then, in the last 48 hours, the temperatures took a nose dive and snow flurries started to invade the air every so often.

So here we are, less than two weeks before Thanksgiving and ready to enter what I call “the tunnel” — a Wisconsin winter, from which one only truly emerges the following May. Sometimes the end of May or the beginning of June. We haven’t put the plastic over the windows yet and we missed our best opportunity to move the unused bicycles from the garage to the basement, but I have already made chili once and hot chocolate twice. Extra blankets have been added to the beds.

All I want to do on the weekend is curl up in the Big Green Chair and read books, but it turns out that what I really need to do is read books and articles about trends in higher education, write papers for grad school, lay out newsletter pages for my congregation, and read my Hebrew books. (Not books that are written in Hebrew, but books that teach me how to read Hebrew. True Hebrew literacy is way beyond the blue horizon right now.)

And apparently I need to wash dishes, lots and lots of dishes. If the hot soapy water weren’t keeping my hands so warm, I would consider switching to paper plates. Two sinks-full of dishes washed after dinner, then a mug of hot chocolate, then it’s time to crawl under all the extra bedding and dream until the alarm goes off.


Knitwise, I found some stash yarns that looked like they would go together well, and on Wednesday I cast on for a garter-stitch wide scarf. I had two skeins of Lion Brand Wool-Ease in Avocado and one skein of an unlabeled yarn of the same weight in a muted gold that one might call Harvest Gold, if one grew up in the 1970s. A vintage-vibe Packers scarf it is!

To ensure that I would use up as much of the yarn as possible, I decided on a simple pattern that would use it in proportion. So, after casting on 30 stitches, I knitted four rows of the green to two rows of the gold (two ridges to one ridge). I’m carrying the extra color yarn up the right side, so I’ll have just two ends to weave in at the start and two at the finish. I’m not sure that I have a full skein of the gold yarn, and of course I didn’t weigh the yarn before I cast on, so I might measure off some of the green yarn to set aside for fringe and see how things look at the other end of the project.

The ball band on the Wool-Ease calls for a US8 (5mm) needle and I’m using a US9 (5.5mm), so it’s producing a squishy, drapey fabric instead of a stiff one. So far it’s been a good project to work on while watching F1 sessions off the DVR. When I’m watching a live session as I did this morning, I have to be careful not to tighten up on the tension. (It was an exciting race, and our favorite driver won! I had to set down the project from time to time, and I’m not sure I touched it at all in the last ten laps.)

As it happens, after knitting on the project since Wednesday it is now 8.5 inches wide and 11 inches long. Those measurements seem familiar….

I also purchased two knitting patterns this weekend. I don’t know how long it’s been since I’ve purchased a pattern.

Knitcircus got me with their weekly email newsletter, and on Saturday morning I bought the pattern for the Thornberry Cowl, designed by Bug Richardson Selig. I liked the look of it in the sample photos, but the part that sold me was the opening phrase in the description: “A simple and quick knit….” Oh, Bug, you had me at simple. Quick is just the icing on the cake. (Or the cupcake, if I’m pretending to watch my portion sizes.)

Another factor may have been that I already had a cake (there’s that word again) of the very yarn specified for the pattern, though it isn’t in one of the colorways that they were suggesting. At this time of year they’re promoting their Christmasy colorways, but a few years ago they also promoted Hanukkah colorways. It was in 2019 that I purchased a skein of Festival of Lights. I didn’t have a plan for the yarn, but I wanted to support the effort.

Let’s face it; there are only so many Hanukkah-themed colorways that are possible to dye up, and I [may have] bought both of them from Knitcircus. (I can’t find the ball band for the other cake, but guess what! The yarn is blue and white.)

Then, this morning, I was concerned about the warmth of my hands as I was doing some electronic page layout work. I did a Google search for fingerless mitts and came across a picture of the Tree of Life Fingerless Gloves pattern at KnitPicks, designed in 2010 by Jenny Williams. The pattern is sold with KnitPicks Wool of the Andes but was designed with KnitPicks Telemark Peruvian Highland Wool. No worries, I probably have some of each. It only takes 100 yards to knit up a pair on US3 (3.25mm) double-pointed needles.

Pattern purchased, yarn in stash, needles in inventory including a cable needle, somewhere. I got this. Warm hands for the win.

Rah, ray, ree, row, rue and sometimes rye

The title sequence came to mind while I was working on a tight deadline for another project. That often seems to be a requirement for creativity. Anyway, I decided to just go with it and see where it led me.

The vowel sequence probably came to mind because I have been reading aloud the same page about Hebrew verb formation for the last week. The information is starting to sink in, but it won’t make sense until I understand the undefined grammar terms that the author is using (sometimes in abbreviation). I suppose that the author thinks he’s starting at Point A, but for me without a background in formal grammar or linguistics it’s more like Point G or H, and I must retreat to understand before I can advance.

By the weekend it finally occurred to me that I’ve been trying to absorb an outline of all possible combinations of stems, prefixes, and suffixes by reading the language used by professional linguists and grammarians. On Saturday afternoon I picked up the grammar text that all of the other authors referred to as the standard, and it’s been much easier going ever since. (Not that he defines his terms, either, but he’s starting from the sounds of the consonants and vowels and working his way up to syllables and sentences. It’s as if I’m now trying to jump onto a moving train that isn’t moving quite as fast. [At least it’s good cardio.])

Rah

With everyone (including myself) getting sick lately, there is not a lot to cheer about. But herbal teas are something to celebrate, as well as friends who keep you in their thoughts and check on your health from time to time. Everyone should have such friends! Unfortunately, some of my friends have COVID. Won’t you keep them in your thoughts?

Ray

Over the weekend I noticed that my social-media friends in Wisconsin have used the same word to describe this weekend: perfect. There is something about the blue sky vibrant behind the yellow and orange leaves and brown tree-trunks, set against the still-green grass, that brings people outside just to gaze at the loveliness.

Of course, it is Wisconsin, and we’re well aware that this won’t last much longer. In the space of a week, we could receive any weather that’s possible to describe — and then its opposite. We will take a perfect day and appreciate it. That includes the low fog that settles over the harvested fields in the morning, the rays of first light piercing the fog, the rich early sunsets, and the magical time before sunset when all the wild animals are invisible and cross the roads with impunity. Watch for deer.

Ree

The only usage I can think of for “ree” is from a cheer that was performed at my high school. I heard it in the early 1980s, but the cheerleaders could have learned it from their mothers, cheerleaders of two decades before. Who knows how old it is? Yes, it is violent; yes, it is funny.

Rah rah ree, kick him in the knee!
Rah rah rass, kick him in the other knee!

Row

I haven’t done any rowing lately, but my collection of canoe paddles remains available in my entryway/laundry room. It’s possible that they have been collecting dust for the last 15 years. My Mad River canoe was sold while I still lived in Stevens Point. I guess we needed the money but I wish I still had it. The cedar-strip canoe my father constructed for me is still in Ohio. My late friend Bonnie’s aluminum canoe, dating back to her late son’s Boy Scout days, was re-homed to a water-loving friend last summer.

It sure would be nice to dip one of these paddles in the water again, but I’m not sure when that might happen. If anyone is at all interested in seeing the paddles, I will try to remember to take a picture of them the next time I reorganize the laundry room.

Rue

One definition of rue is “to bitterly regret.” It’s also a plant used in some traditional medicines. I could quote the wiki I just ran across, but I have friends who will know much more about rue from their own experience. (I suppose that could be true for either definition, but I was thinking about the plant.) Feel free to share information in the comments!

Sometimes rye

The fields that surround my house were planted in rye last fall. After the snow melted off in the spring, they grew to a lovely height before they were sprayed and flattened to become a sort of mulch for a crop of soybeans. I’m no judge of soybeans, but they were taller than any soybeans I’d noticed before. (I’m from Ohio. I have seen a lot of corn and a lot of soybeans.) A week or so ago, the soybeans were harvested. Now I can see tiny green shoots coming up in the field. I thought they were another crop of rye, but after a discussion with the landlord (who leases the fields to the farmer down the road) I discovered that they’re wheat. The crop will be harvested next year in time to plant alfalfa and, literally, make hay.


Knitwise, I made steady progress on the narrow triangle. And I found the sketch!

Simple but elegant.

The first night, when I started the piece, I made 8 inches of progress. After the first three days I was tempted to name it “Zeno’s Shawl” after the math/physics/philosophy problem where each step only goes half as far as the one before. I have been knitting on it every day (!) for a week now, for just over 100 rows, and it measures 17 inches. Out of 50 grams of wool, I have 16 grams left to knit up.

But that’s okay. All it aspires to be is a knitted object made from random Noro. It will be a triangle, and this being Noro yarn, there will probably be one more orange-y stripe in there somewhere. But it’s fine, it’s really fine. The work is keeping my hands busy when they need to be busy, it’s making my mind work at bare minimum while I’m passively watching something else (such as the Grand Prix of Mexico), and it’s giving me something made from Noro. (“Is that Noro? For me? Oh, you shouldn’t have.”)

Honestly, if I keep knitting on this every day I should have finished it in the course of the upcoming week. Then it will be time to find another ball of skein of yarn to work up into something. (And/or I could finally wash and block the Leroy Cowl, but let’s not go rushing into things.) I should probably start on the earwarmer/headband project before I dig up anything that could become more complicated.

Week One of Hebrew Homeschool

As you may (or may not) know, a new Hebrew year has begun and with it comes a fresh cycle of reading through the Torah, also known as the Five Books of Moses. (If you weren’t raised Jewish, you may know these books as Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy.) For the last several years I have chosen different ways to read through these texts — sometimes with one translation, sometimes with all the translations I have at hand. This year I decided to do something different.

“Big plan” seems to translate to tachnat gadolah in Google Translate, which doesn’t tell me which vowels I should be using. So I’ll just stick with English for now.

Anyway, this year’s big plan is to study Hebrew using the first phrase or sentence of each weekly reading. Last week this looked like a really good idea, when the phrase was In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. This week’s selection is…a bit longer.

So, you may ask, how do I propose to overdo this task? Well, I look up the first phrase/sentence and then I hand-write it in a special notebook, complete with the vowel and cantillation marks. Those marks tell me not only how to pronounce the words, but how to chant the phrase in case I were called to do so during a service. (If I were asked to chant Torah I would be given more lead time, but this part of the effort will allow me to become more familiar with the phrasing so that it wouldn’t be as much work to learn another portion of the text.)

This part was originally supposed to be a copy-and-paste from the text in Sefaria.org, until I found out that I’m not able to copy and paste it. Okay, fine, I will handwrite the Hebrew. I need practice doing that anyway. That brings me to the next step: practicing my Hebrew letters. I purchased a particular handwriting book for this, which allows me to trace over the shapes. I’m trying to do that with a calligraphy pen so that I can make the letters look more like typography.

Another thing I’m doing in my special notebook, after writing out the whole phrase, is writing each Hebrew word on a separate line. Then I write the transliteration, then the translation as I work it out. At this point I have to learn to look up words in a Hebrew dictionary, which is considerably harder to do when you don’t know the order of the Hebrew alphabet. (Ask me how I know.)

After I have done this step (which may also involve looking into a particular verb tense to see what it means and how the prefixes and suffixes work), I practice writing a key word from the sentence — over and over until my lettering improves.

And, of course, I am looking at the cantillation marks to figure out how to chant the sentence, and then I am practicing my chanting until I’m confident with it.

When I was not doing these things for the first week’s lesson I was reading some books to support my effort. This weekend I finished reading Hebrew for Life: Strategies for Learning, Retaining, and Reviving Hebrew by Adam Howell, Benjamin Merkle, and Robert Plummer. I’m also reading Building Your Biblical Hebrew Vocabulary: Learning Words by Frequency and Cognate by George Landes. Before he gets to the section with the vocabulary lists, he has a 39-page section called “How Hebrew Words are Formed.” I’m now on page 9, having read each paragraph over and over until something, anything, sticks long enough to let me feel that it’s safe to go forward. Page 9 out of 39 may sound pretty good, but this section actually starts on page 7.

I’ve actually been doing a lot of things to keep from purchasing more books. Over the weekend I reorganized my Hebrew-related books to bring the dictionaries, grammars, and language-learning volumes closer together. And while I was sick in bed (thank you, semi-annual sinus infection), I looked up the suggested references in Hebrew for Life, read the reviews of them that I could find via the university library, and decided that I didn’t need to expand that particular part of my library at this time. (In fact, I discovered that I already own some of the recommended resources for learning Aramaic. So there’s that.)

All of this really takes more time to describe than it does to do, and it helps me to have multiple approaches to becoming familiar with the letters, the words, the meanings, and the tunes. The only other aspect I’d like would be to have a study partner who’s doing the same thing, but that seems unlikely. In their absence, I’ll walk my own path.


Knitwise, I have made theoretical progress on the next project. Having discovered a rewound ball of Noro in one of my yarn bins, I decided to turn it into something just to use it up. There isn’t very much of it (just over 50 grams), so I didn’t want to play the guessing game of using a pattern and wondering if I had enough yarn to finish it. On the other hand, I have been knitting the same two “one-row wonder” patterns over and over, and wanted to try something slightly different.

If I knew where I had put the pattern sketch I made, I would show it to you. But for now you’ll have to make do with a verbal description. I plan to knit a narrow triangle, with the increases on one side only, and eyelets/yarnovers on every other right side row.

This pattern (algorithm, really) might look like:
Cast on n stitches.
1. Kf&b, k to end
2. Sl 1, p to end
3. K1, YO, k to end
4. Sl 1, p to end
…but we will just have to try it out and see how it goes. After I have knitted for a few inches it should be an easy piece to “read,” which means that I will be able to tell what I should do next just by looking at it instead of consulting a formal pattern.

I ran the logistics of this pattern past a couple of more experienced knitters (the kind who remember which way the increases lean, for example) and they nodded their heads and said it should work as I imagined. (I didn’t ask any follow-up questions, like How many stitches should I cast on to start, or Should I slip the first stitch on the wrong side? I didn’t want to take up too much of their time, and how will I ever learn if I don’t spend enough time bumbling around?)

I did take the yarn back home and rewind the ball so that the current working end was on the inside and the old inside became the new working end. Evidently I had tried to make something with this yarn many moons ago — probably many dozens of moons — and then ripped the project back and wound the yarn around the outside of the ball.

One reason that I rewound the ball was just to redistribute the tension in the yarn. This is probably nothing more than BethScience,™ but it felt like I was doing something useful. I also wanted to “turn the yarn around” to rearrange the color sequence. Now that I am able to start from the other end, I’ll be able to make a long and narrow section with a pale green that doesn’t last long in the skein; I’ll be able to end with a very rich and bright green that should last for a few rows and look like a deliberate color choice for that end of the piece.

Sure, it doesn’t look like much now.

There isn’t any other yarning going on right now; the Leroy Cowl is still waiting patiently on the dining room table while I find time and the wool-wash. While it’s waiting I will move the US8 needles closer and closer to the Noro so they’ll be handy when I’m finally ready to cast on for my triangle.

Published in: on October 23, 2022 at 8:25 pm  Leave a Comment  

Rain delay

Last week was exhausting, in part because my preparation for (and anxieties about) Yom Kippur had me waking up before my alarm every morning, fretting about the details. Finally, on the last morning of early waking, I told my brain don’t worry about it, it will be fine. I’ve been gradually getting back onto my sleep schedule ever since, but I have had some odd dreams. One was about a friend giving me a haircut and partially shaving my head down to the scalp. No thanks, I think I’ll go to the salon instead.

The end of the Jewish year also marks the end of a cycle of reading the Torah, with which I was, mostly, keeping up. I did read to the end this morning, which gives me more than a week to decide what kind of regular reading I’d like to do for the upcoming year.

I’m brainstorming now about establishing a reading pattern that will have me not just reading a small portion each week — just the first sentence — but studying the grammar of it so I’m actually learning some Hebrew. I’ll also practice chanting it, which may have me learning some new cantillation marks and will certainly give me lots of practice with the marks I already “know.”

And because I didn’t have enough projects this week, I spent part of this afternoon cleaning the upholstery in my car. I’ll backtrack to how it all began. Our boy Montmorency Jerome had a “senior checkup” at the vet on Friday morning. One of our concerns was that he has started bumping into things around the house, so the vet gave him a little trim around the eyes. She was very pleased at how well he tolerated this, and she was ready to award him a gold star for this part of the appointment.

However, it all went downhill when it was time to trim his nails. I had let this go for too long, and the quick had grown to the end of each nail. Which meant that every time a nail was clipped, it bled. And he writhed and wailed and whimpered with each snip, with the vet daubing a clotting solution on the end of each cut nail. We were all glad when this was over.

We entered the lobby, and there was a gentleman holding onto the collar of a large and enthusiastic yellow lab. No problem, I thought; I’ll leave my purse here and put Monty in the car and come back in to pay. But when I got outside I saw that there was a man sitting in the car next to ours, with a tiny yapping dog. Uh oh, I thought, this won’t work either. The man took his small dog inside, solving the problem of adjacency to Monty.

By the time I got back inside, the man with the eager yellow lab was on one side of the room and the man with the tiny dog was on the other, stroking it between yaps and growls and saying, let it go, let it go. I sat halfway between them, giggling. The vet’s chaotic-neutral cat, meanwhile, strolled through the lobby as it pleased, clearly embarrassed by the dogs’ uncouth behaviour. At last the cat was removed, the yellow lab was brought in for her exam, and I was able to pay my bill.

I went back out to the car, and Monty was sitting in the driver’s seat, his leash snagged on the center console. His claws had continued to bleed while he scampered across every seat in the car. It looked like a crime scene, and all I could do was drive back home and think about how to minimize the damage.

I laid towels across the seats until Sunday afternoon, when Eldest and I applied an industrial carpet cleaning solution to the bloodstains. It now looks like… less of a crime scene. Monty has his next “pedicure” appointment in another month. Please remind me to bring the towels with me when we’re on our way to the vet’s office so I can put them on the seats before Monty’s nails are trimmed.


Knitwise, I was able to finish the next step of the pink project: weaving in the ends. As Eldest and I got ready to watch the Japanese Grand Prix, I didn’t think that I had an appropriate knitting project to accompany my viewing. But it was raining in Suzuka, and after three laps filled with one- and two-car incidents, the race was red-flagged until the rain might let up. (Eventually, it let up just enough. No spoilers from me.)

This was a perfect time to pick up the pink project and carefully weave in all of the loose ends that had been left when I transitioned from one skein to another. Some of the tails I left were quite long, which explains why I had gotten tangled up in the project the last few times I’d hauled it out. After the ends were in I removed a stitch marker and the twist-tie that marked the halfway point. It’s done, for now.

The last parts will be washing it — does anyone think that washing it in hot water might encourage the colors to bleed together? — and blocking it out at Mom’s house. At Thanksgiving. So I’ve actually finished a knitting project a month ahead of deadline. Gad freaking zooks!

The rain delay was quite long, so I picked up the project bag for Leroy’s Cowl, cast on 76 stitches with the wool held double, then knitted 4 rounds of 1×1 ribbing before switching to plain knitting in the round for another inch.

I haven’t knitted anything held double before and this yarn was bulky to begin with, so this was a big workout for my hands. On the other hand, it looks to be a very quick knit if I keep at it. The only tricky part will be guessing when it’s time to switch to 1×1 ribbing on the other end. But, you know what? If my estimate is off it will hardly matter. It’s a warm cowl I’ll wear around my own neck and it’s not a museum piece.

Maybe I’ll give my hands one day off before I start knitting on it again. I can use the time to find another quick knit to do — or to sort through my unfinished projects again. After all, it is Socktober and I have at least two unfinished projects that fall into the “sock” category. Which shall I finish — the socks for myself or the socks for a friend?

Published in: on October 9, 2022 at 7:04 pm  Leave a Comment  

Writing by candlelight

This weekend I finally flashed on a way to get my room organized in the way I’d been thinking about. A few packed boxes [of SecondSon’s books] later, I had my own books and items on the tall bookcase and I was able to clear off my writing desk (the one in my bedroom; I seem to have several) enough that I could pull out my journal and start writing. The last entry was dated April 30, but we are not going to dwell on that as we are going to be forward thinking. The new last entry is dated June 11.

The top two shelves.

When I sat down to write, I noticed that I had a small battery-operated candle to my right. I turned it on and felt soothed by the gentle flickering light. The writing-desk corner of the room is somewhat lacking in light after the sun starts to set, and I wondered what kind of lighting fixture I might try to find to put in the corner.

One of my tall Zen square lamps? Don’t have an extra.

Maybe a lamp that looks like a tall pillar candle?

What about just having a tall pillar battery candle? A bunch of pillar battery candles?

So I added “lamp/battery candle” to my Goodwill list for Sunday, and this afternoon I headed off to start the hunt. At the first Goodwill — the Simply Soft Victorian Rose yarn portal — I struck out on yarn but found three battery candles that looked like good candidates. “Ah,” said the cashier knowingly, “candles for people who can’t have candles.” At the second Goodwill there were more candle candidates, but I didn’t feel the need to stock up until I knew if the first set would work out.

At home I cleaned the dust off the candles, replaced the batteries, and fired them up. Unfortunately one of the battery-candle manufacturers missed the memo about how candles provide gentle, flickering light and used an LED in their model. I’m not sure what I’ll do with that candle, but I’m thinking about donating it to the second Goodwill. I could also keep it in the car for use as an emergency beacon.

Anyway, the other candles worked out and now I have a little candle grouping next to my writing desk.

The next journal entry should be June 12, but we will see how it goes.

I also organized a wardrobe that was holding almost all of my CDs, which I finally alphabetized, and some tape cassettes, which I stuffed in with the last drawer of CDs. This freed up the bottom two drawers, which I filled with yarn and project bags that had been sitting in a pile at the foot of my bed. Now other items sit in a pile at the foot of my bed, but not yarn. That’s progress, people.


Knitwise, I finally got to the end of the current skein of Victorian Rose on the pink project, and I was even able to play a little game of Yarn Chicken to get there.

before…
after!

But the most important thing about getting to the end of this skein was that the measurements of the project would now allow me to calculate how much yarn I would need for the rest of the project. tl;dr — I am going to need one more skein of discontinued Simply Soft in Victorian Rose. The good news is that I can chug away on the two skeins of Victorian Rose that I do have, and it will be a while before I need to worry about finding Skein Five to complete this project. But it sure would be nice if Skein Five turned up before I even had to worry about finding it.

Other than moving the pink project around so I could knit at work and at home, I haven’t done much with the knitting this week. I did recently cast on for a new project, but I didn’t like the feel of the yarn at all (Red Heart Super Saver) so I may look through my patterns and stash to see if I can start something that will actually be relaxing and enjoyable to knit rather than another “I hope it will soften up in the wash” project that I have to slog through. Goodness knows there is enough nice yarn around here that is begging to finally be made into something. Perhaps the current acrylic project could be balanced by a project that calls for, say, baby alpaca. Or cashmere. Or maybe real wool with heckin’ lanolin. I’ll go take a look….

One octave at a time

The piano and I spent last week getting to know each other. I was too timid to try it out on Sunday after it arrived — I may possibly have pressed and released one key — but since then I have sat down to practice every day but one. Lo and behold, yesterday I found myself at the end of the Week One lessons.

That is not to say that I am playing very well. But I do enjoy the time I spend at the piano, and I can hear myself getting better over the course of each session. If I practice every day I think it will help me remember what I’m learning. And, oh boy, can I feel my brain working hard to learn how to position my fingers, where to find the notes on the keyboard, and how to start coordinating my left hand and right hand (see Figure 1) so that not only do they know what they are doing, but they complement each other’s work.

Figure 1.

It’s exhausting but it’s a good kind of exhausting. And it helps me that there is not a picky teacher sitting on the bench with me, pushing me to start sooner, practice more often, and play faster. I get to the piano when I can, and I’m delighted to be there. The piano is so patient with me and asks nothing. I can do the lesson over and over again and it does not criticize or complain. I want to do the lesson over and over until I can feel that it’s taking root in me, that I have learned something that I will remember how to do the next day.

If I reach a certain level of proficiency it would probably be a good idea for me to have a teacher (or musical consultant). I’m not concerned about that right now. I’m focusing on showing up each day for my lesson and repeating it until I get better. I have not purchased the next book in the series (though I did put it on my Amazon wishlist) and I have not set any ridiculous goals. (This feels so weird! What am I without my ridiculous goals?)

The book also contains links to a website with progress trackers, more exposition, and embedded videos of the author performing and explaining the lessons. It’s a great bonus. Not only can I hear what the lesson is supposed to sound like, but I can understand how each simple lesson is the basis of more complicated playing that comes with greater skill.

Figure 2.

By the end of the week I had also purchased a small bit of new hardware for the piano. The music desk (that’s what it is called; I looked it up see Figure 2) was attached with only one (slightly bent) stainless steel screw, so I took it to the hardware store and matched it to a pair of brass screws. The total expenditure was 80 cents. It wasn’t a perfect fix, but the desk can now support my music book without putting pressure on the screws. Next adjustment: tightening the loose left leg (see Figure 2).

I’ll need to get some help with the leg adjustment because of problems with my own legs. I’ve had pain near my right knee for about a month now, and the doctor thinks that it is probably not Terrible Deadly Bone Disease but a bit of arthritis that acts up when I put pressure on that knee. The answer is not to stop moving around, but to take anti-inflammatory medical twice a day and see if that helps. But putting pressure on the knee certainly doesn’t help. If there is some sort of screw at the top of the leg that should be tightened, I can surely find an able-bodied young man in this very household to help me tighten it.


In other news, we replaced a dying microwave oven this week. We had never named the previous model — which is odd, since we name almost every important inanimate object in this house — but when Eldest and I noticed that the previous model was an Emerson, we immediately wanted to name the new device Fittipaldi. (Thoreau was not an option, as microwave ovens are not known for cooking food Thoreau-ly.) We cleaned up and saved Emerson’s turntable ring and glass tray; you never know when you might need an emergency replacement.

While I was on the shopping trip for the microwave oven, I stopped in at TJ Maxx and HomeGoods for two reasons: to run my eyes over pretty things (as some of us Of a Certain Age used to do at a place called “the mall” many years ago), and to look for a platter that I had seen over a year ago, passed up, regretted passing up, and had never seen again. It was a round platter with a peacock-like pattern, and it was even featured in the slide show at checkout even when I could no longer find available specimens on the web site.

Yesterday, I found one. I stared at it, then quietly returned to the front of the store, got a shopping cart, removed the various bowls and trays that were stacked upon it, and lowered the platter gently to the bottom of the cart. Then, I suppose, I exhaled. When I checked out, having found a couple of other things I wanted, the cashier wrapped it carefully in paper and was happy that I was happy.

I have no specific plans for it, except to have it. It’s one of the most beautiful things I have ever seen.

Figure 3.

After we set up the new microwave and made sure that it worked properly, we took the old microwave — which had a malfunctioning magnetron and was no longer safe to use — to the very local dump, and placed it in the special container for electronics. While we were there we took a look around, as we are wont to do, and immediately spotted a cute little Sears portable TV that turned out to be from 1978 and made in Korea. I don’t have a photo of it yet, but Eldest and I cleaned up the Adorable Thing. And it works! Photos next week.


If you’re reading this blog post closely, and you probably are, Dear Reader, you surely have noticed that I neglected to mention the words Hebrew or knitting or housecleaning (don’t hold your breath). What goes around comes around, and I will return to my previous interests. It’s been too busy at work, and probably will be until the end of the semester, to study Hebrew or to knit at lunchtime. So those pursuits will have to wait to be done at home, where one son has turned vegetarian (requiring more meal planning and cooking time) and the high schoolers are also galloping towards the end of the term. So there is no time for anything, and I do what I can when I am able. (Did I mention that I’m finishing up my taxes tomorrow through no fault of my own?)

I’d better wrap up now while there is still time to sit for a piano lesson. ¡Hasta domingo!

In sink

The language learning is beginning to come together. My rabbit-hole project of trying to find the meanings of the names of the vowel symbols served to keep me looking at my handmade flash cards longer and more often than I otherwise might have done. By the time I opened up by Biblical Hebrew binder and took another look at the lessons in chapter 2, the symbols and their names were much more familiar. Over the weekend I was able to finish all of the exercises in chapter 2, so I printed out chapter 3, hole-punched it, and added it to my binder.

My overall Hebrew-learning strategy ended up being that I read a little at a time in three different Hebrew grammar books. One of the books, a first draft of a textbook, was written in an attempt to replace one of the other books, which the authors felt was outdated. The old-fashioned lists and drills in the 1961 book gave me another angle of attack on the language, though, so it’s all good. Every grammar book begins with the same basic concepts, so each of them is discussing the same topics at (generally) the same time. When one author skims over a certain topic, another goes into more depth. The books tends to complement and compensate for each other.

When I do read the Hebrew of the Torah, I understand it a little better now — if just through the prepositions and conjunctions.

With regard to other linguistic advances, I prepped a small notebook as my Ladino lexicon this evening. Although I don’t play Wordle, I do play a few Wordle variants on a daily basis (at least, until yesterday, when my Puzzle Page app died and took and its “Wordy” game with it), including Jewdle and Ladino Wordle.

Ladino is a cross between medieval Spanish and Hebrew, originally spoken by the Jews who were exiled from Spain in 1492. It looks like an oddly spelled Spanish with a big hunk of Jewish vocabulary, and most native Spanish speakers would be able to read most of it. Over the centuries it has also been influenced by Turkish, Arabic, French, and other languages. It doesn’t have a lot of native speakers right now, but there are some enthusiastic Ladino-learners around the world who are doing their best to preserve it.

One of the ways I’m learning it is through the Ladino version of Wordle. It’s a pretty strict version of the original game, and only legitimate Ladino words can be used as the guesses. Eldest and I have recently begun to collaborate on a lot of the puzzle games that I play each day, and he often does better than I do at the Jewdle puzzle or the New York Times Spelling Bee.

For Ladino, we’re compiling a list of the guess-words that work. A few days ago I decided to make alphabet stickers, Wordle style, on some label paper I had sitting around. The final design took a few days to work out in my head — and then I felt that I needed to know the approximate word distribution in Ladino so that I had just the right number of pages for each letter in its alphabet. I counted the words in the glossary of an introductory Ladino textbook and extrapolated the proportions, and I think it’s close enough. I allowed for eight words and their short definitions on each page. Let me know if you’re interested in downloading the Word file so that you can print out your own stickers.


Knitwise, I haven’t knitted anything in a week. On the campus where I work, we are starting Spring Break so I may be able to do more knitting at lunch. I’d like to finish that turquoise scarf once and for all! I’ll go stash-diving for some sky-blue and sunflower-gold as well.

In other creative news, I received a couple of positive comments on my recent upload to the songwriting group. So this week I’ll try to revise the lyrics with those suggestions in mind.

Keep singing in the car!

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