Category Archives: travelling

woolful, edinyarnfest and the craft sessions

I’d like to send out a massive thank you to everyone who has left a comment here- and on Instagram, Twitter and, of course, in person!- in support and encouragement of our move overseas… It has meant a huge amount to me and I’ll be carrying you all with me when we head off at the end of January. Gee, the world certainly feels like a small place with the whole SM circus, doesn’t it?!

Just a few updates: if you haven’t already twigged to the joys of Ashley Yousling’s Woolful podcast, you need to check it out. This super smart and resourceful young woman is changing the way many of us see the yarn that we knit with and the fibre craft community that we are part of by opening up fascinating conversations with fibre people; from small scale to commercial, she’s talking to those involved in producing fibre (spinners, dyers, shearers, yarn companies…) and to those who use it (designers, craftspeople, artists…). I think these conversations will continue in yarn shops, at kitchen tables, in colleges and at fibre events around the world…  A new episode is released each Tuesday and I was thrilled and very honoured to talk to Ashley as part of this week’s episode, mostly about natural dyeing and dye plants but our conversation meandered through many areas of fibre love! You can find all the eps over at Wooful. Oh, and Ashley and her family is also building a fibre mill in Idaho- I can’t wait to see what comes out of that place!

I mentioned in my last post that I am building up a stock of colourwork cowls to take with me to Scotland-  well, I’ve signed up for a booth at the Edinburgh Yarn Festival in mid-March! It’ll be my first time selling my work in this kind of setting and I’m excited and a little anxious at the same time… But, at the very least, I’m looking at it as a great chance to meet and connect with the local knitting community. So, as well as packing up the house and catching up with loved ones, I’m going to have a busy 6 weeks of making!

And, lastly, it was bittersweet teaching my very last Melbourne class at Sunspun this week. It was great to finally run Fibre and Yarn 101, which was inspired by years of questions from customers about how to choose the best yarn for a project and why some yarn substitutions just don’t seem to work. I think my students left with a clearer picture of how different natural fibres behave and why different types of processing result in very different yarns and how to anticipate and work with that. But I’m really not sure whether there’ll be much opportunity for teaching in Scotland- perhaps natural dyeing will be the way to go, as teaching knitting there feels like teaching my grandmother to suck eggs! I’ll just have to wait and see and, in the meantime, will be so happy to take lots of classes to soak up as much of the local knowledge and tradition. But I wanted to let you know that I will be returning in September to teach at the Craft Sessions. It’s such a beautiful event that I don’t want to miss it and it also gives me a chance to bring back and share techniques and skills picked up over there. And, of course, to spend time with my family and friends. So it won’t be that long between cups of tea!

So that’s all my news for now. Have a lovely weekend!

knits for cold weather- and why we’re going to need them

I finished this lovely, enormous scarf at least a year ago but I haven’t had many chances to wear it. Not only is it about 3m long and made up of dense cables but I used a super-light, core-blown 14ply alpaca yarn- and the combination makes it one very warm scarf, the kind you don’t often need here in Melbourne…

February Scarf

February Scarf

But that is all about to change… because Scotto and I are moving to Scotland!!! Eep!!! So exciting and, frankly, a bit terrifying too- it seems much more daunting to pack up my life and head out into the big world at 41 than when I was 18 or 23. But that is part of the reason we’re doing it. We want to strip away some of the things that hold us in order to try to flow with life as much as we can. Not that those things that hold us are bad; they are often precious and beautiful and together make up a lot of who we are.

But there is more. And I think that sometimes we need to push ourselves to remember that, especially after hard times, like the last few years for my family. On top of that, I didn’t expect to find myself without children and that’s been hard to come to terms with. I didn’t think I’d hear myself saying that there was anything lucky about it- but, yes, I am starting to see that we are lucky to be free to do this, to do so many things that would be much harder if we had those responsibilities. And we have the means to do it, to take the risk. We don’t have work or a place to move into or any friends over there… but we’re (mostly) ok with that.

So, at the end of January, we’ll head off. So much to organise and do between over the next 6-7 weeks (including building up a stock of colourwork cowls for an exciting project in Scotland-more on that soon!) and so many lovely folk to share time with. I hardly ever post photos of myself but here’s a few of the faces that I’m currently moving between on a daily basis:

Unsure

Unsure

Jumping out of my skin

Terrified-excited

Shy

Shy

But mostly happy and ready to move forward...

And ready to move forward.

Wish us luck, won’t you?

capeweed

While out at Discovery Bay last weekend, I got a bit obsessed with photographing Capeweed (Arctotheca calendula), an environmental weed on mainland Australia. Capeweed is found in areas of habitation (gardens and lawns), among agricultural crops and pastures and in conservation areas, displacing ephemeral native species, harbouring pests that threaten indigenous species and posing a threat to the integrity of plant communities and the survival of threatened species in these sites.

So why photograph it? As soon as I got up close to this garish flower, I caught a glimpse of a much more subtle beauty. I often think that, if we can see beyond the context of our understanding of this and other species as weeds, we are able to simply observe them for what they are.

And also to learn how and why it is able to spread so successfully. It’s hard not to be amazed by the strategies of nature.

From budding to withering…

1: Bud

1: Bud contained within juicy, feathered bracts

 

2: Petals tucked in

2: Bracts retract to reveal the “petals” neatly tucked in. Daisy flowers are actually inflorescences or groups of  florets; the outer ring of petals are ligular florets with a ligule or strap that looks like a petal.

 

3: Petals unfurl

3: The ligules unfurl

 

4: Opening

4: Opening to reveal the inner tubular florets

 

5: Open

5: Open for pollination

 

6: Outer ray flowers gone and

6: The falling of the tubular florets reveals a tangle of wool that surrounds each cypsela or fruit

 

7:

7: Fluff

 

8: Star-like

8: The star-like floral attachment points resemble Venetian glass beads

 

9: The pappus becomes more and more fluffy in order to catch the wind for dispersal

9: The woolly cypselas become increasingly fluffy in order to catch the wind for dispersal

 

10: Fuzz

10: Ready for dispersal

 

12: Achene (or fruit) starting to be dispersed

12: Cypselas dispersing

 

15:

15: Subtle colours… this woolly covering attracts moisture, creating a little germination bed and increasing the chance of survival of the seeds inside, once on the ground and ripe.

 

14: Matrix

14: Dispersal reveals a beautiful receptacle

 

14:

15: Remains of the tubular florets that ring the receptacle

 

16:

16: All parts weather and brown

 

17: Beauty

17: Beauty in senescence

 

 

discovery bay

We recently spent a weekend camping with friends at Discovery Bay Coastal Park in the west of Victoria, an area with abundant history and natural beauty.

We went for a hike in an enchanted forest of moonah trees…

Walking

Walking

Moonah forest

Moonah forest

Lichen and mosses abound in the Enchanted Forest

Lichen and mosses abound in the Enchanted Forest

Spider

Perfect web

Rockwall

Rockwall

And visited a surreal landscape originally believed to be made up petrified trees but now recognised as the result of mineral erosion…

Lunar scape covered in Leucophyta brownie

Lunarscape covered in Leucophyta brownii

Pillars

Pillars

Small pillars

Small pillars

Tree trunk shapes

Tree trunk shapes

Eroded pillars

Eroded pillars

Blue sea

Blue sea

Waves at the Blowholes

Waves at the Blowholes

Discovery Bay is known for its huge sand dunes and we were keen to get among them.

Dune walking

Dune walking

Sand dunes

Sand dunes

Reeds

Reeds

Scotto on the dunes

Scotto on the dunes

Not much speed but lots of fun

Not much speed but lots of fun

It was a weekend of chats, fires, walks and discoveries. And lovely time with good friends, including this sweet little man…

Determined to carry his own things

Determined to help!

And I had some time with my camera…

Kunzea leaves

Kunzea leaves

Kunzea flowers, which become muntries, a bushfood with a spicy apple flavour

Kunzea pomifera flowers, which become muntries, a bushfood berry with a spicy apple flavour

Kunzea

Kunzea

Pimelea

Pimelea

Polygala myrtifolia- weedy but spectacular

Polygala myrtifolia- weedy but spectacular

It’s a very beautiful area to spend time and well worth the five-hour drive from Melbourne…

acheron

We spent a couple of nights up at the farm where my sister and her family live. They were away so, while it was a real shame to not have time with them, it was such a treat to have the place to ourselves for a few days together before Scotto heads to Sydney for 11 weeks of study…

dsc_2159
Acheron

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Eucalyptus

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River Redgum

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Acacia

dsc_2138Grasses and gum

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Reeds

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Acheron river

Sneaking in between two very hot weeks, we had beautiful weather… We spent most of the daytime down by the Acheron River, which was fresh, fast and super cold! And the nights were so clear that we slept outside on the trampoline and watched the stars wheel across the sky, so much brighter and closer than they are at home.

The birds, mostly cockatoos, had the same idea and were out enjoying the gorgeous days.

dsc_1776Cockatoo and clouds

dsc_2025Cockatoo

dsc_2027Cockatoo

I didn’t do much but wander about with my new (old) camera, getting a feel for it and looking for small treasures in a way I haven’t for ages.

dsc_2183Grasses

dsc_2214Grasses

dsc_2208Dock

dsc_1905Brave beetle

Among the leaves of some of the eucalypts, I spotted quite a few of these delicate nests… I’ve got no idea who uses them but they are strangely beautiful and reminded me of a small child’s shoe. Anyone know what they are?

dsc_1879Webbed nest

dsc_1755Gum shedding

We hung about with the animals: they have chooks…

dsc_1993Settling down to roost

… a couple of Highland cows…

dsc_1925Wonderful colours

… and Damara sheep, who completed transfixed me with their wild horns, their ability to moult (they don’t need to be shorn), the ingenious way they store fat in their tails and their wonderful, beautiful faces.

dsc_2217Wee coos!

dsc_2058Wild boy

dsc_2069Beautiful girl

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Beautiful colouring

dsc_2112Black beauty

dsc_2103Soft and hard

dsc_2061Moulting

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Fatty tail

Thanks so, so much, Hen and Tim, for a magical weekend. It was just what we needed.