Und für meine deutsch-sprechenden Blogleser: es gab bei uns keinen Wirbelwind--keine Sorgen machen. Der Wirbelwind war ich--weil ich so viel rundherum gefahren bin wegen den neuen Küchenboden.
Yesterday, my weekly trip to the city was another busy one. Denturist--getting closer to a great fit on the new dentures. Orthotic Man-getting closer to a comfortable fit with the orthotics. I actually visited my LYS, Wool Revival, to get the yarn for my nephew's kilt hose. Also for several balls of yarn to swatch for the Honeycomb sweater that I will be re-designing for submission somewhere. I have downloaded the submission guidelines for some magazines and for Twist Collective. I'm also thinking about a theme for a book. I am a novice in the publishing department, so that idea may go nowhere, but you'll never know if you don't try.
Greenhouse update: These pictures show the lean-to greenhouse as it looked after the October 26, 2008 windstorm. We didn't get it finished before the greenhouse season began, so we worked without it.
Now it is all finished. On Sunday morning it was calm, so two of the kids, Kubota Man Jr., and Daughter #2, came to help put the 2 layers of plastic on. Then some touch-ups and clean-up and here we are: I'm almost in the mood to start planting.
Daisy and Sparky are happy, too.
Blue potatoes from the garden. They should be called purple potatoes. But the next picture tells you why they are "blue".
Blue mashed potatoes. It was sad, seeing the lovely purple water go down the drain. Next I will try doing oven fries in the hopes of preserving the color. I believe that the colors hold many of the nutrients in our food.
The Big Deck being washed. Notice the rails are stained, but the slats are not on yet. Sometimes I wish that I didn't always research my projects and just do them. I'm talking about building and staining the deck. We re-built the deck last year. I did my homework and found out that preserved wood needs to dry for one season before staining, since the preservative is pressure-inserted into the wood, and it is possible that it is still wet inside. I also learned that when you cut preserved wood, you have to treat the cut ends with end-cut preservative, a toxic green product, since the wood is not treated all the way through. So my rails, which are stained with semi-transparent stain, have some dark spots where I treated them after cutting. The floor is getting solid stain (supposed to last longer under traffic), so there the spots won't matter.
Back to the staining. I finished the building of the deck about this time last year, so the next season would be winter. So, the staining is happening now. Over the drying time, the wood tries to protect itself with a gray glaze which needs to be scrubbed off with special wood-prep products. This will help the floor finish last much longer, and protect the wood, since the glaze prevents the oils in the stain from penetrating well. This almost took longer to describe than to do. Notice the difference in the color between the washed and unwashed part.
Knitting report:
Honeycomb #3 is finished. Because of its natural white color, it wouldn't photograph well, so I used the gray tone on the camera to show off the details. The following picture, while not being clear on the details, shows the color of the yarn. The buttons are gold-colored. Honeycomb #4 (black)--one front and almost one sleeve finished.


Nephew's kilt hose, have started the band at the top of the leg.
Knitalong Socks--almost finished clue 2 on one of the socks.
Have been swatching various yarns for my Honeycomb Sweater submission. Tried a cotton, a mohair-acrylic blend, a store-bought brand of alpaca yarn, sock yarn, and also the kilt hose yarn. None of them give me the beautiful stitch definition that the Alpaca Man's yarn does. The LYS owner thinks it's just the properties of that particular yarn.
Till next time:Having grandchildren is the best of all possible worlds. I don't have any responsibility for them--I just do all the fun stuff. (Mary Beth)





oh drat, I missed your day in town. I was hoping to catch you, I had/have a tailoring emergency!
ReplyDeletethose potatoes are wild! I'm not sure how i feel about blue mashed potatoes. your honeycomb looks great!
ReplyDeleteThat green house looks amazing! The honeycomb looks like it is coming along beautifully. Can't wait to see the finished piece. Have a great weekend
ReplyDeleteHi Sigrun, The blue potatoes are fun. Your green house is huge! Bigger than my backyard. The honeycomb stitch is lovely and so is the color of your deck. I gave you an award in my blog post today.
ReplyDeleteDear Sigrun, You are an amazing lady! Thank you for your sweet comments you always brighten my day! I will keep you posted on the C-word front, hopefully this week the doc will say there is No c-word.
ReplyDeleteAnd your greenhouse is huge! Wow that is one impressive building. And those potatos are pretty... I betcha they are yummy too!
your blue potatoes remind me of when I was a girl. That is what my family grew for years, and none of my friends would taste them!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comments! The Apple Auto Glass people have the catchiest song for their ads. I always end up humming it after I hear it on TV.
ReplyDeleteGreat greenhouse! Lots of work I would imagine.
Your pictures are all wonderful! You are such an inspiration... I can't imagine taking care of an entire greenhouse and knitting too. Feel like I can barely handle one small yard and our growing season is very short so it shouldn't be a big deal.
ReplyDelete