Hello there. I write this post on an overcast chilly morning. For the record, the juncos have not left our area. Just this morning, two came to the front feeder. Earlier three perched on the deck railing. This past Sunday we woke to a half inch of snow. However the sun came out and it was gone by late afternoon. I can live with that kind of March snow. My brother in Billings, Montana reported a heavy wet 6 - 8 inches. Bah Humbug.
Today is Unvaveled Wednesday with Kat and company. My knitting looks much the same as it did last week. I knit another section on the purple shawl and got the hitchhiker back on track. I finished the first sock of a pair so that is visible progress. Sunday I cast on the second sock.
I am spinning singles from two 4 ounce braids of the same blue-gray BFL fiber. The colors resemble shades of a white breasted nuthatch. In some light it looks gray and in other light it looks blue. I split the braids horizontally by light and dark shades. Then I divided the colors so I could spin two bobbins in the same sequence. Currently I am spinning singles of light colors. Then I'll spin singles of the darker shades on different bobbins. I hope to get two skeins that can be used as one gradient. As I learn more about what to expect when spinning, I am often delighted with unexpected results. As Ada Limón wrote in the poem, "Give Me This" "Why am I not allowed delight?"
My reading is a little scattered perhaps because these books are so different from each other. My local group is reading the fantasy/allegory Piranesi by Susanna Clarke. I never read fantasy but am enjoying the beginning of the story. No doubt I'm missing the symbolism but decided not to fret and just read for awhile to get a feel for the book. I look forward to our discussion. Because the library hold came in, I am reading Shrines of Gaiety by Kate Atkinson. Atkinson is a witty writer so her asides and comments about the characters are fun to read. The story begins in 1926 amidst the mayhem of the roaring twenties in London. The cast of characters is large and the nightclub life is gritty.
During chores and while making, I listen to Booth by Karen Joy Fowler. The description of the country coming apart before the Civil War feels eerily familiar. The story is fascinating and I will listen to the end. In my opinion, this novel could have been better edited. With four hours left, I have heard about one too many crackling fires and curly-haired lads. I will forever associate the socks in the photo with this audiobook. Funny how that sometimes happen.
March, in spite of gray skies, snow, and wintry mix has flown. April will be most welcome.
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