Poults, a dumb cat, fiber, and a contest
First the poults. We're down to three (found one smushed under Trixie), but they're doing well. Yesterday Trixie taught them all about dust bathing. Here are her contortions:
And here are the babies, a bit baffled but loving the sun:
\
So how was your three-day weekend? We had a blast. We attended a graduation party/cookout Saturday night and I came home $11 richer. That was my cut as half of the tournament-champion Baggo team. (I scored an impressive 4 points in 4 matches, but we won anyway.) Lesson: Being a guest is fun and relaxing.
Sunday night, we threw a casual barbecue and potluck for friends and family. We had no guest list and an expectation of between 20 and 50 guests. At one point, someone counted 79! A good time was had by all, although my time was mostly spent looking for more flatware and cake plates, giving tours of the farm, and drinking margaritas. I remember nothing except having a few near-panic attacks wondering why certain guests were heaping their plates with seconds and thirds before other people had made it to the line yet.
Lesson: Being a host is fun, but stressful. Next year, we'll be prepared...
Remember this peahen?
I haven't caught her on film lately because, from all indications, she's been sitting on a nest in the woods. She comes out every day or two just long enough to get a drink and a snack. It's been a couple of weeks, at least, so you could be seeing baby peafowl pictures any day...
Meanwhile, indoors, Milo is an idiot. The other day he jumped from a dresser to the top of the closet door, which was swinging back and forth while he pondered what to do next.
The Oh Crap moment:
He survived, with my help.
So there was spinning over the weeked. I finished the hand-processed Romney:
I love the way this came out. The Romney is so different from my last spinning, the bamboo/merino. It's not nearly as soft or shiny, of course. But it's also not mill-processed. I have posted three other colorways of the Romney at A Piece of Vermont Yarn & Fiber, but I probably won't do it again. It just took so long to card and pull into roving that my price should have been much higher, too high to make it saleable. I lowered the price this time, but it's not profitable so I won't be able to do it again. Batts, yes. Roving, probably not.
Anyway, here are the new colorways, Tango, Sweet Dreams, and Acadia:
They are very sheepy, in every way. I love that you can tell this is wool. It smells like wool, feels like wool, and has the special telltale VM that I could not quite get out completely. It's really local, from my friend Donna's farm across town, and you can be assured that the wool has traveled less than 3 miles to get from raw fleece to for-sale. As much as I appreciate the smooth, flawless rope of mill-processed top, I love feeling closer to the animal. Both have their merits.
Now, the contest. This idea was sparked by a Ravelry discussion among "yarnies" (independent yarn dyers and sellers) about whether they name their base yarns. I would like to do this, instead of saying "Colonial Superwash" or the even more generic "wool/nylon superwash." I'd like a name for each particular base yarn that immediately identifies it as being made by A Piece of Vermont. That way, if I do switch base yarn suppliers but continue to carry a similar yarn, I can give it a different name so customers won't confuse the new with the old. For instance, Louet has its Gems yarn. Knitpicks has Shine. I need names, people.
Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to come up with a name for the Colonial Superwash (wool/nylon) and/or the Panda Superwash (merino/bamboo/nylon) fingering-weight yarns (not the colorways, but the yarns themselves).
Ideally, the names will be evocative of something related to Vermont or country living, plus the yarn's characteristics. The Colonial Superwash is my standby sock yarn and I consider it a good workhorse yarn. As for the bamboo, I can't see working a "Panda" concept into a Vermont theme, but if you keep in mind that it's a warmer-weather yarn, that may help. "Summertime," "Swimming Hole," "Lakeside," you get the idea.
Submit as many ideas as you want in the comments. The winner will receive a skein of the yarn in question.
Calvin is waiting.
ETA: Are any other Typepad users struggling with the new interface "improvements"? Not having fun here. I can't get text to flow around photos the way I want and the little selection buttons don't do what I tell them to.

















































































































Recent Comments