Hello Gentle Readers. This week brings extreme heat to our area. The vegetable garden and raised bed look like a jungle and the cone flowers thrive. The center of the cucumber vines begin to wilt but I have plenty of pickles canned for the coming year. Late yesterday afternoon a black swallowtail butterfly enjoyed blooms on the butterfly bush. I hope the nectar was sweet and cooling. I need to fill a shallow tray with water for them. We certainly could use some rain.
I link this Wednesday post with Kat and the Unravelers. I made some knitting progress this week. A toe will finish this second sock. I also need to try on the summer top to check for fit and decide the best way to add length to the yoke. The cotton yarn is making a lovely fabric but knitting with it is hard on my hands. At this rate, it's going to be a top for next summer.
In the meantime, I cast on a Hitchhiker with a skein of very deep stash. Remember when Madelinetosh yarn was all the rage? Around here, it was hard to find and I thought I'd found treasure when I bought this skein on sale. Then it never looked quite right in any project. Last January when I went through my yarn, I vowed I'd either knit with this in 2024 or find it a new home in 2025. The other day I saw it in the "up next" bin and thought about something Bonny, the knitter of many beautiful Hitchhikers, once wrote on her blog. (Paraphrasing) "I often wonder what a skein of yarn would look like as a Hitchhiker." Of course, since the project is new it's fun to knit.
As for reading, I'm listening to The Darkest Evening, a Vera Stanhope mystery by Ann Cleaves. It's a little formulaic but Vera is good company while making pickles. I'm reading Send for Me by Lauren Fox, this month's selection by my local book club. This historical fiction follows three generations of Jewish women from just before World War Two in Germany into Wisconsin. The perspective of a young couple leaving Germany and parents behind and how the author frames that story should make for a good discussion. While there are some well written passages, other parts of the book feel a little choppy. However, I'm only half-way so my opinion might change.
What is keeping you company on this last day in July?
part of the jungle |