More snow last night and today. This time, very wet and heavy.
The goats are all starting to shed their cashmere undercoats. In every year past, I've started combing Acer by late February. Within a couple of weeks, several others have shed enough for a first combing. I try to keep up, doing a bit every day, because once all the goats have reached what an unkind observer might call "the ragbag stage," it's easy to get overwhelmed.
This year is different. I felt sorry for the goats having to carry their cashmere during that crazy warm December, and by January, I was already seeing bits of cashmere hanging off the ends of horns after a goat had had a little scritch. Starting to drop cashmere in January?!
Now that we've finally been getting lots of snow and consistently cold weather, the goats are using their cashmere for its original purpose and I have postponed taking it from them. There's a time between the cashmere "disconnecting" and falling or being rubbed off by a goat, so there's been some leeway. But the forecast for the next 10 days is considerably warmer, so it's time to wave a comb over a couple of goats who have wisps of cashmere literally hanging off their topcoats.
In related news (it is, you'll see), a few weeks ago I decided to try to use up the Shetland yarn left after knitting the
first and
second haps. By making a third hap.
And because I wanted it to be distinct from the two special gift haps, I added one dyed color to the natural yarn palette, and also created my own stripe sequence. And I'm making it a good bit larger.
The way this pattern works: after knitting the center as a flat diagonal diamond, all the edge stitches are picked up on a circular needle and the rest of the hap is knit in the round and becomes a large and unwieldy knitted sack. Try to imagine knitting up something the size of a very floppy bushel basket, of which one can only clearly see the top edge. So there's not much sense of how the finished item is going to look when it's ultimately off the needle and spread out for blocking.
In other words, my stripe sequence may turn out to be rubbish. But there's no point in worrying about it, because we'll find out soon enough.
I always like to wrap up a knitting project before cashmere harvesting begins (see how we're getting back to the goats?), because when I'm using my hands for slowly combing goats every day for weeks on end, knitting must be backburnered until the combs are scrubbed and tucked away for another year.
This hap could have been done and washed and blocked in February if I hadn't decided to make it so big. But the end is in sight, in part because I don't want to leave this massive project gathering dust while I comb goats. And in part because the stitch count increases by eight on every other row and there is a limit to how many stitches can be functionally crammed onto one needle.
Speaking of goats, it's time for evening chores - which I can now start after 5 PM without bringing a flashlight. I really enjoy this part of the orbit!
I hope you are having a weekend as magical as a snowfall.
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Oh gosh, that Shetland yarn looks so wonderfully soft. I just want to reach into the photo and touch it! Adding the green to the hap makes a lovely color combination. Great snow photos too!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Leigh! I'd say the Shetland yarn is delightfully sproing-y, so for example, the big hap-in-progress project bag would make a very comfy pillow! But the yarn itself is a bit scritchy, at least compared to something like merino. Not something everyone would wear next to the skin.
DeleteRagbag stage - ha! I can just imagine what that looks like. Good luck with the hap.
ReplyDeleteThank you! Last night I reached a point where I could have stopped, but decided to continue on for another 6 rounds. Over 600 stitches per round now!
DeleteSnow falling for a while in New England is a celebration farewell to winter.
ReplyDeleteIt's not looking Winter's Farewell this morning. I expect to be snowed in for at least a couple of days.
DeleteA very floppy bushel basket - very technical term! I do hope this one is for you?
ReplyDeleteI should take a picture :) And...maybe!
DeleteI never realized where cashmere comes from. How very cool. I like your pattern too, especially those colors together. No snow here except a little skiff here and there, and flakes blowing around randomly, but the cold has done in the daffodils, sadly.
ReplyDeleteSorry about your daffs! We are pretty thoroughly buried under wet snow at the moment, so I'm glad our daffodils scheduled their arrival for later.
DeleteI wonder whether you received the New England Snow Dump yesterday? Our mountains are building a healthy snowpack - yippee!! Down here in the desert we've been getting good soaking rains - also yippee!
ReplyDeleteChris from Boise
Yes indeed. Snowed from Monday night right through to sometime in the wee hours today, Wednesday. Like you, I'm glad we've got more total Winter precip, and that's what I'll be thinking about as I wade out to do chores again :)
DeleteWow - it's so cool you're a knitter with your own cashmere goats! Your hap WIP looks scrumptious :)
ReplyDelete