Archive for the ‘knitting’ Category

Small amount of knitting news

August 14, 2009

I do not have much knitting to brag about; during the 2008-2009 school year, I had very little time to knit.  But I did complete a sweater for GS#2 and it turned out beautiful.  Furthermore, the kid loves it.

GS2 wearing knitted sweater

GS2 wearing knitted sweater

 

GS2 wearing sweater back

GS2 wearing sweater back

Five People? In one bed?

July 14, 2008

On Friday evening, I actually did some reading.  I had been trying to get interested in a John Irving novel, but like the other novel that I read by him, I’m having trouble starting it.  He must have issues in getting his novels started. 

 

After a couple of weeks of trouble trying to read the thing, I threw it down and picked up another book.  I am now reading “Gentle Rain” by Deborah Smith.  It is a contemporary novel, written around ten years ago, I believe, and so far, it’s very good.  The storyline is about a wealthy young woman who loses her parents in an accident, and as she goes through their things after the funeral, she finds out she was adopted.  When she tries to find out more about her birth parents, she finds out that her parents were mentally challenged and they work on a cattle ranch in North Florida.  So far, the book is very interesting and a lot of fun to read.  I’ll let you know how the last half of the book is.

 

In the meantime, Hubby began nagging me to search for the car title on the 97 Nissan Altima. (Hubby is worse than any woman about nagging).  The vehicle was still broken down, still sitting in the driveway and still not sold.  Oh God, I would have rather been beaten with a stick than to search for the one little sheet of paper in my messy house. 

 

The next morning, Saturday, I realized that my prayers had not been answered (my car title had not magically appeared despite my prayers) so I had to spend literally the whole morning searching through a mountain of bills and papers in search of that title.  While I worked on that fun little task, I did separate the bills into dated boxes so that my future searches would not be as time consuming.  Two hours later, I still had not found that title.  Figuring that I was looking in the wrong place, I jumped in the truck and drove the 15 miles to work, downtown, to see if it was at work.  I didn’t find it though and returned home to pick up where I had left off in my search an hour earlier.  Believe it or not, I did find the darn document almost at the bottom of the mountain of papers.  I went ahead and completed the vast amount of receipts and invoices and bills, completed the separation of all paperwork and then put the boxes up.  I didn’t think I would ever finish.  But as mad as I had been, at least I had accomplished the monumental task and I can now give myself a pat on the back.  All I need to do now is go through some of the older papers again and weed them out again – it would give us more room. 

 

That afternoon, Hubby followed me over to No.1son’s so that I could leave my 2002 Nissan Altima with him.  My brakes had been sounding funny so he agreed to do a brakejob and check the air conditioning filter to see if it was clogged.  No.1son usually saves me a good bit of money.  I took the kids off of his hands so that he could work, and Hubby and I took the kids and No.2son to the property with us.  We didn’t do any work on the property this time, it was just too hot (97 degrees), we just wanted to check on the camper and make sure that all was well.  While we were there, we took a hike just to have something to do and the kids loved it.  We were eaten up by mosquitoes, but the little ones get such a kick of going through the woods like that, I imagine the woods seem larger than life to them.  We saw a snake while on our excursion, but I’m not sure if all of the kids saw it or not.  From my position, I could only see it’s head poking up from the other side of a log.  I think it was enough that there was a snake nearby.  Hubby tried to get as close as he could to it and confirmed that it was NON-poisonous and let it go, he predicted that it was a black-runner, I’m not sure if it really was or not but it was definitely a dark brown and black with a little round head, not a triangular-shaped head; Hubby got a hearty thank-you from me for a change. 

I did get a photo of a strange spider.  I knocked it’s web down so that I could get a good shot of it, and it slowly moved around giving me ample opportunity to get in focus.

red spider

red spider

The next shot is of a butterfly that I was lucky enough to capture on film.  They flutter around so quickly, that you don’t see how in the world you will get a shot.  Sometimes you feel so lucky.  Isn’t he great?

Butterfly

Butterfly

 

The last shot from the property is a reminder to always be careful and watch what you are doing in the country.

 

snake-skin

snake-skin

When we returned to the truck, the kids threw out some corn for the property critters, then we left.  It had been a nice afternoon.  When we returned home, Hubby inflated the kiddie pool in the backyard and the kids played in the water for more than an hour.  After getting all of the kids dressed for bed and teeth brushed and all of that fun stuff, I went on to bed, leaving Perry in the livingroom to watch TV with the kids.

 

There were five people in my bed on Saturday night.  Around 11:00 p.m., I awoke when kids started piling in the bed.  Obviously, Hubby was too tired to pull out the air-mattress.  Sheesh, I could give that night up on getting any rest.  For the next hour, No.2GS talked and talked and talked (the kid never shuts up), while Baby Girl elbowed me and kicked me, Hubby snored on the other side of me, and No.1GS complained about his Paw-Paw snoring.  Then, around midnight, my stomach started hurting.  I don’t know what was wrong, but I couldn’t stay off of the toilet and I was up and down like a yo-yo.  Eventually, I just moved to the couch with my pillow and stayed there the rest of the night.  The couch is almost miserable to sleep on, it only looks squishy and comfy.  There is some sort of rod separating the couch into thirds, hitting me square in the ribs and again in the thigh bone.  Then I got hot and had to turn down the air-conditioning.  Then I was still hot and I had to get up to unplug the fan and move it to another location.  Then I decided the fan was too close to me and I got up to move it further away.  After I at last got comfortable, I’ll be darned if DD didn’t come home from work around 1:00 a.m., making racket as she made her way to her room.  I’m the type of person who likes a fairly quiet house when I sleep.  Several minutes later, she went to the kitchen and cooked something, rattling the pots and pans around noisily while the kitchen light nearly blinded me.  The last time I looked at the clock, it was 2:30 a.m.

 

At 7:00 a.m. on Sunday morning, No.2GS decided to get up.  Now, he had been yakking at midnight the night before, what the heck was he doing up at 7:00 a.m.?  He normally never gets up at 7.  He went to the bathroom and then got in the livingroom chair and just looked at me, waiting for what, I don’t know.  I told him it was too early to get up, and offered the end of my couch if he wanted to sit there quietly.  A few minutes later, I looked over at him, and he had fallen back to sleep.  I fell back to sleep also. 

 

At 9:30, the other two kids arose, so I had to get up.  I cooked a large breakfast then slowly began getting the kids ready to go home, searching for shoes and trying to get Hubby up so that he could take me over to No.1son’s so that I could get my car.  Hubby was none too happy about me waking him up and he gave me a piece of his small mind.  Anyway, I was happy to get my car back.  All four brakes had to be changed and the rotors turned.  He only charged me for the cost of the brakes, $200, but I gave him an extra $80, so I only had to put out $280 for all four wheels.  He had also cleaned the air-conditioning filter; there was definitely a noticeable difference.  The car also brakes beautifully now I’m happy to say. 

 

The only thing I have to do to the car now is wait on some more headlight kits to come in that No.1son has ordered for me, then he will change them out.  Ever since I got the car, the headlight bulbs blow out if you just look at them wrong.  And these particular headlight bulbs have to be one of the most difficult to change out than any other vehicle model.  All mechanics hate the 2002 Nissan Altima headlights.  We’ve been putting off getting new headlight kits (which hold the headlight bulb) for two years now because the pair of kits will be around $300.  Yeap, you read that right.  Terry found a set for $150 so he put in an order for them.  The set will be in soon and he’ll change it out and I hope I never have any more problems with headlights again.  Terry also volunteered to change out my spark plugs since the vehicle now has more than 100K miles.

 

On Sunday afternoon, I picked up my camera from the house, filled my car up with gas, then rode around looking at houses.  I specifically wanted to look at house exteriors to decide on brick colors and metal roof colors and things like that.  I took a lot of pictures of houses (receiving a lot of strange looks from home-owners, I’m sure), but it was such a nice outing just riding alone by myself.  (It’s so seldom that I get “alone” time.  I have been well-blessed with company.)  If I build a house, I’m considering a metal roof instead of composition shingles.  Salesmen say it’s energy efficient and lasts twice as long as shingles.  But it costs a good bit more too – one and a half times more – ouch!  I’m particularly interested in the forest green color.  I love forest green so much!  To me, it almost goes with everything and every color.  But I also know that forest green is dark and would absorb too much heat, so another color that I’m considering is a tan color roof or maybe champagne.  Hmm.  I have also been eyeballing a limestone rock that is light in color and goes very well with the green roof.  But limestone rock is very expensive so I could only put it on a small portion of the house.  The rest of the exterior of the house would have to be made of another product.  We could go hardyplank siding (hardyplank is made of a concrete product) which looks like wood.  Or we could go with brick which is what I would rather do.  It’s longer lasting and greener because brick is thicker than hardiplank.

 

In knitting news, I completed a cute pink baby sweater for my sister made in stockinette stitch, with yarn-overs at the bottom, creating a lacy feminine look.  I had fallen in love with the yarn, Caron Soft, in the loveliest shade of pink.  But my knitting is still so immature at times; at the edges, I forgot to garter stitch a row here and there and the completed project looked messy and immature to me.  Furthermore, I was almost finished with the darn thing when my sister e-mailed with the glad tidings that the ultra-sound picked up a little indication that the baby is a boy.  Well, bless my soul, this poor sweater was doomed from the beginning.  I finished the sweater as quickly as possible, then asked this poor woman at the local knitting club if she would take it off my hands.  She was kind enough to do so.  And now I am on to another sweater for my dear sister — in the proper color this time — blue!   Wish me luck with this one.

 

 

 

It’s rainin’ caterpillars!

April 9, 2008

All I can say about this past weekend is “Wild!” Everything about it was rip-roaring, frustrating, chaotic, dizzying, exciting, yet I would do it again if I could.

Most of our weekend was spent at Planter’s Point where we did a small amount of cleanup work, but mostly played on the four-wheelers with the kids. Those kids would have ridden the whole day and a half we were there if they could have — they loved riding! Hubby and No.1son cut new trails in the woods, then would take the bikes through the new trails. We rode so much that our hands hurt from holding the handlebars and pressing the gas.

Riding trail

There were only a couple of problems with the weekend. First of all, I didn’t feel the best in the world — I didn’t feel bad enough to stay home, just headachy, a little dizzy, tired, lethargic — probably a sinus infection coming on since the oak pollen is so high. All I wanted to do was lay down and sleep but I entertained the kids on the four-wheeler some and did some knitting on the poncho for Baby-Girl. The poncho’s main front and back portions were completed in a denim-blue color. I added a hood to the poncho in a light-mauve which went well with the blue. I think the poncho is absolutely precious! The blue color is the poncho portion, the light mauve is the hood, I almost knitted a light mauve pocket on the front of the poncho.

Kniitted poncho

The knitted poncho

The second problem with the weekend was the lack of supplies. We forgot the charcoal to cook with. Luckily, there’s a Wal-Mart just a few miles down the road. We also forgot the sleeping bags, cook-stove, syrup. I don’t know what our problem was with packing for this past weekend, it’s not like we’ve never camped before — we have camped before plenty of times. We just couldn’t get our acts together and didn’t remember to ask each other if we remembered to pack “such-and-such.” That night, we paid for our sins memory-lapses — we nearly froze to death with only sheets to keep us warm. Hubby had towed the popup camper to the property the day before and being up off the ground protected us some. We wouldn’t have lasted the night on the ground. Hubby and I were in the queen-size bed on one end of the camper with a sheet and a lap-throw that was found in the SUV. GS2 and Baby Girl were on a bed in the middle of the camper with coats and thick clothing that we had with us. No.2son and GS1 slept on the full-size bed on the other end of the camper with a sheet covering them and a new tarp. You might laugh at that idea but the plastic tarp held the body heat in. Those boys were the warmest of the whole group.

GS1 helping

An environmental event occurred which surprised Hubby and me. Caterpillars were in the trees by the thousands and I guess the caterpillars had just hatched and were gorging themselves in the lush green tender leaves that had just sprouted before falling by their silken threads to within a few feet from the ground before plopping to the ground.

Caterpillar

Caterpillar mischief

Poor Baby Girl was almost traumatized by the “snakes” she called them. The fuzzy little colorful worms were everywhere — on the chairs, on the tables, plopping from overhead on to your shoulder while Baby Girl was crying “snake, snake” in every breath. I don’t think she’ll ever recover; we’ll probably have to drag her on to the property from now on.

This is a cocoon that the caterpillars came from. The cocoons were in the trees by the hundreds.

cocoon

And for home-building purposes, we now have a drive-way in.

property driveway

We are so excited.  We have completed the next step towards building a home on this property.

Well, that was embarrassing . . .

March 3, 2008

Well, I was so embarrassed after writing yesterday’s blog — Yesterday, I uploaded two photos of the knitted baby layette that I made and couldn’t edit the darn things to save my life (or anyone else’s for that matter). The photos were just huge and took up a whole screen. Any editing I tried to do to the photos just turned them into a little dots on the screen after my blog-text. At last, in a fit of frustration, in the middle of cooking dinner, returning grandchildren to their parents, washing clothes, and all of that fun stuff, I at last lost my temper and tried to delete the things, but just like an inkstain on a white shirt, the photos were still there taunting me at my attempt to do such a simple process as upload photos. This morning, I was able to delete the photos after tampering around with them for an hour. Thank goodness. We all have to live and learn I guess.

I have a photo of my teen below.  Isn’t he great?  He’s absolutely the best kid.

MC

On to other topics. What I am working on at home now is a knitted scarf, it’s not very sexy though. I don’t know if I’ll even take a picture of the darn thing. My 3-year-old grandson asked for a scarf a couple of weeks ago and selected pastel-green baby-yarn to make the scarf out of. I’m sure I turned up my nose, but what the kid wants, the kid gets, so I’ve been knitting away at it now and then when I plop down in front of the TV. Since it’s a scarf, it’s a quick knit across the short rows, but since I’m not that enthusiastic about the project, it’s almost torturous to work on it — it’s not a beautiful bright color to catch someone’s attention, so I’ve been plodding along, forcing myself to pick up the darn thing and trying to remember his sweet little smiling face when he had asked for it a couple of weeks ago. God, I pray his sweet little face in my mind can keep me knitting on that scarf, because I’m bored, Bored, BORED.

My first post — Hello World!

March 2, 2008

I’m so excited. I am actually writing my first blog. Squeal!

Now, where do I begin? I’m a working wife and mother to three marvelous children — my daughter is the oldest and is smart and beautiful and 28 years old. My m

iddle child is a son and is a 26 year old father of 3 beautiful children. My youngest son is 16 years and is an outstanding teenager. Unusual to hear that about a teen, huh? But he is — he’s really wonderful — he’s sensitive, good-looking, has a wonderful smile, a great babysitter to his nephews and niece, loves animals, and likes to read.

I’m a “craftster” and can manage most crochet stitches well although I’ve taken a break from crocheting for a while. My new study is knitting. I began knitting a couple of months ago to make baby hats for hospitals (for newborns) during the fall of 2007 and I’ve been knitting ever since.

  Baby layette–back

baby layette–front

baby layette close-up