Sunday, 30 April 2017

Arty Farty - Knitting at the Speed of Light...

Written in 2010 in India ... Well, I finished my shawl with a day to spare and I've even managed to block it. So, it looks like I might have a warm neck for our trip home ... I hope!



We will be returning home to a house with no heating as the heatpump has chosen this week to die ... oh JOY. Pat  (who has antifreeze running in his veins) informs me that even he is freezing and that the new heatpump can't be installed for around 3-4 weeks.  Talk about going from one extreme to the other. Ah well. I guess we'll be buying a gas heater or something similar to get us through once we are home as extreme cold is just as dangerous for Geri as extreme heat is.

This is the gorgeous pashmina that Chris got for me. The stitching is super fine and it's hard to imagine it being done by hand.







And last but not least - Geri's silk shawl ...

Sunday, 23 April 2017

Ruminative Ponderings - The Tale of Ducky Daddles and Her Chickens Little

Written in around 2008 ...

One fine early summer morning, a friend and I were exploring thHamilton Gardens. As we approached one of the newest areas, my friend assured me that she was sure that I would just love the Modern American Garden we were entering. On entering the garden, we strolled around the curvaceous wall surrounding the shallow blue swimming pool’. It was, I suppose, meant to emulate a terribly flashy (or perhaps trashy would be more apt) Hollywood poolside garden setting.

As I wandered and mused, I spotted the only real thing of beauty in the display. Cruising around on the pool (pond would be more accurate) were Ducky Daddles and her brood of Chickens Little. Like fluffy magnetsthe ducklings cruised around after their mum on what may well have been their inaugural swim.  Quietly, she glided around the pool keeping a wary eye on us. We in turn cruised around the garden, deciding that we didn’t like it very much.

Coming back to the pool, we watched as Ducky popped out of the pool and waited patiently for the Chickens Little to follow her. One after the other they attempted to exit the pool, only to be thwarted by its high sides. Heaving a sigh, Ducky plopped back in anled them off for a few more laps of the pool. The Chickens Little began to tire and Ducky; becoming a triffle agitated, tried again to lead her babies out of the pool. Once more we watched the Chickens Little splat themselves against the concrete sides of the pool. Peeping miserably they gave up and bobbed unhappily in the water calling to Ducky. My friend and I decided that we had to do something to help the Daddles family, but not for their sake alone. It wouldn’t be a terribly pleasant experience for other visitors to the gardens to find The Chickens Little in the pool - but no longer with us.

We polished our armour; as all good Knights who come to the rescue of Damsel Duckies do, and went on a quest to find something to make a ramp with which the Chickens Little could climb out of the pool. In an area of new construction nearby we searched for ramp-building materials, eventually finding …a brick. Well, beggars can’t be choosers so we heading back to Hollywood land, brick in hand. On arrival, we placed the brick near the rim of the pool and instructed Ducky to show the Chickens Little how to use it as a stepping stone. We were met with a beady eyed blank stare from Ducky.

Scratching our heads, we went back to the drawing board.

I looked around again, announcing that these gardens were far too neat and tidy. Couldn’t the builders have been more considerate and left some duck rescuing materials lying around? Finally, I spotted a large rock at the back of a garden bed. Unlike its compatriots, it wasn’t concreted down. Heaving it up, carried it to the pool and carefully placed it in the water at the edge of the pool. It made a great ramp. Well satisfied with my efforts, I stood back and waited for Ducky to calmly herd her babies over the rock, climb out and take them home for breakfast.

After a few minutes of quiet paddling, Ducky drifted toward the rock, we held our breath. Ducky stopped in her – tracks, peered at the rock with suspicion and shepherded the Chickens Little away from it, quietly telling them that there were gremlins under that rock and they were to avoid it at all costs. Not to be beaten; and being of good Kiwi stock, we did a great sheepdog routine around the rim of the poolSlowly we herded the family back around to the rock, using a two-pronged approach to get them moving in the right direction. Unfortunately, the Chickens Little had learned their lesson well. No way were they going anywhere near that rock.

With the Chickens Little wilting before our eyes, I half jokingly asked my friend which one of us was going to take our shoes off and go paddling first? We grinned, laughed and then…took our shoes off. It was quite pleasant in the water, if one ignored the odd duck poo squishing between the toes. Well, Ducky nearly had an apoplectic fit. She didn’t know who to avoid first. Hissing angrily she zigzagged away from each of us in turn. We did the sheepdog thing again and herded the family over to the rock. About half a metre away from it, Ducky completely lost the plot. Stretching her neck out and hissing furiously, she went for my hands. At the same time most of the Chickens Little erupted out of the water, scrambled up the rock and took off along the path. One of the remaining babies got itself jammed between the rock and the pool wall, whilst another jet boated across to the other side of the pool. Ducky, deciding she had done a good job killing my hand flopped out of the pond and waddled off to attend those of her babies that had escaped the marauding monsters. Gathering her brood around her, she took stock of the situation.

Meanwhile, I freed the wedged baby and put it on the path to join its mum. Our job was nearly done. However, as I paddled off around the pool to gather up Jetboat, Ducky; deciding that he/she was in great danger, prepared to leap back into the pool to protect it. Reacting with admirably mild hysteria, my friend headed off Ducky and her brood while I went in pursuit of Jetboat. It was running on rocket fuel, but fortunately, its fuel tank was quickly depleted. I cornered it in a curve of the pool. Jet boat made one last ditch for freedom, diving under the water and paddling furiously to escape – straight into my waiting hands. I carried it over to where Ducky waited, deposited it on the path and waiting. Jetboat sprawled on the concrete for a minute, then tucked its feet under itself and zoomed over to Ducky. Shaking her tail in agitation, Ducky gathered the Chickens Little around her and made for the bushes.

It would have been fun to follow her and listen to her giving the Chickens Little a lecture about the whole episode. A spot in the bushes would also have been a good place to observe the look of puzzlement on the face of the gardener when he came to work in the Hollywood garden that day. I can just imagine them scratching their head, gazing at the brick and the rock in the water and trying to work out which breed of vandals does that sort of thing. Well, you never know!


FYI - If you are ever visiting Hamilton, the gardens are well worth a visit.  Thye are some of the best I've seen. 

Sunday, 16 April 2017

The Hog Diaries - Crying for Crustina

Written in August 2014

Today is day 5.

Crustina has been in a steady decline since late on her 2nd day, losing 40+gms a day in addition to the weight lost from the mange crust and her quills. I have been syringe feeding her since day 3 and she was accepting the feeds and fluid ok until this morning. On day 3 - Monday, I sent a poo sample up to Narelle for analysis and yesterday she called to let me know that the slides showed a MASSIVE Coccidia and Capillaria burden as well as some Lungworm.

Then this morning little Crustina refused all attempts to feed her and by 3 pm it was obvious she had given up the fight, poor wee thing. With a heavy heart I took her straight in to the vet to be put to sleep.

Goodbye Crustina - May you be carried on your journey over the Rainbow Bridge on strong legs and with joy in your heart.

Sunday, 9 April 2017

Arty Farty - The heat is on.... or rather, it's about to come OFF in a hurry!

Written in India in 2010 ... We've been in Gurgaon for two months. In this time, despite my very best efforts, Geri's Masto has gone from bad to appalling. Her health is very unstable and she's had the return of some serious symptoms that we haven't seen since she started her medication regime. So, a difficult decision has been made and she and I are leaving - we have three more days here.

This decision is problematic in a number of ways, one of which is that we certainly didn't plan to be going to Wellington's winter from Gurgaon's summer. The reason it's a problem is that the temp here is still in the mid 40s (c) and the temp at home in Wellington is around 5-12c. This is going to be a challenge to manage with Geri's masto, to put it mildly. To complicate things, we are having a short break in Melbourne on the way home - trouble is, we have no winter clothing with us...

So, I've raided my stash and have been knitting fit to burst for the last 5 days. I already had a number of cold weather projects planned, one of which was a beret for Geri. As she can't wear wool; as I've mentioned in earlier posts, I had found a gorgeous handspun pure rabbit angora yarn in Melbourne from Morris and Sons.

Pure Rabbit Angora

Its label suggests; 5-6mm needles / 19 st per 10cm. I used 5mm needles 18st / 26 rows to achieve the gauge that matched the pattern I was using.

Lion Brand Kim Beret

The beret knitted up very quickly and took exactly two hanks of yarn. Best of all, Geri loves it and now I know that at least her head will be warm!














At the same time as starting the beret I started a scarf/shawl for myself using the same pattern that I used to make the Green Colonnade Shawl. I'm using the same brand of wool as last time -  Manos del Uruguay Wool Clasica pure merino. The colours are a bit off in this photo so check out the link to get a better feel for the combination.

The solid colour is:

Manos del Uruguay Wool Clasica - Kohl

and the varigated is:

Manos del Uruguay Wool Clasica - Lava

This is growing quite well, but I don't think I'm going to get it finished in time for our trip home - ah well. I should be wearing it by early July though 8-}

To compensate for the lack of something warm to wear around my shoulders, Chris bought me (you know how is goes .... I chose and Chris paid ...) a present - a beautiful hand embroidered genuine pashmina.  Perhaps it's just as well I am leaving as the choice was overwhelming. We got Geri a lovely pure silk one as well. I'll post photos a bit later as we have a massive dust storm heading our way this very minute and it has become too dark to take photos of them !

Saturday, 1 April 2017

Ruminative Ponderings - Of Builders and Bees

Written during section renovations at our previous house in Pukerua Bay ...

Barrow load by barrow load, over three weekends, the concrete was mixed and poured. Slowly the wall took shape. When it was finished it was 12 m long and 2 m high. Not a thing of beauty by any stretch of the imagination, but Tim was pleased with his effort. The lack of reinforcing or a footing didn’t matter because, for now, the slow creep of his back lawn down the Wellington hillside had been halted.

Seventy years later, we purchased Tim's old property. We didn’t look too carefully at the huge concrete retaining wall that divided the top of the property from the bottom. It looked pretty solid and even had some apple trees espaliered against it. For a long time, the area below the wall was an unvisited wilderness.

After 8 ½ years, the garden slowly started to call me. The kids were getting older, more independent with their studies and I needed a new project. Maybe it was time to start that vege garden I’d always dreamt of. Six weeks of death and destruction with the scrub cutter followed, and the lower section slowly emerged from utter chaos. The odd hole (past excavations by No.1 son) swallowed legs occasionally, and eighty years of rubbish, including an old water tank, was hauled off to the tip. We rediscovered our old trampoline, which had been lifted over the top fence and deposited below by a gale many years before. After an expedition to Levin to order and collect a new mat for the trampoline, we installed it on the frame. No. 1 son decided to test it. He got in two wonderful bounces before the frame emitted a creaking snap and slowly subsided to the ground in three pieces. Scratch that idea. The tramp too, was hauled to the tip, and my planned vege garden got larger.

True to Wellington form the site is steep, and in order to be productive it needed terracing and retaining. We had our first retaining wall built out of triangular concrete blocks donated to us by friends. Great, level one was complete.
During the construction of the block wall, another tradesman – we’ll call him ‘G’ - arrived to start work on fencing the boundary. As he worked, I would wander down with a coffee for him and survey the work in hand. We got chatting about the block wall and started throwing some ideas around about what else could be done to improve the fledgling garden. We decided (the royal ‘We’ of course) that it would be a good idea to run a couple of layers of retaining parallel to the block wall, further up the slope. Pondering the possibilities I clambered back up to the house, hauled a few dozen books off my bookshelf and quietly schemed and plotted my way through the ideas that floated off the pages, letting them germinate and flourish in my mind.
By the end of the next day, G had installed the retaining and it was time for another coffee. So down I went, mug in hand for another chinwag. As we sat in the late afternoon sun I gazed pensively at the little retaining wall and a germinating idea burst forth into bloom.

“Hey G, ‘we’ could build a decking pathway along below the retaining.”

G swilled the last of his coffee, muttered about building things backwards then agreed that it would be okay. As the whole area started to take shape, new ideas – amongst them a flight of steps to link the two levels, and extensions of old ideas arrived thick and fast in my busy little brain. Over the next few days, G learnt to be very worried when he arrived to start work each morning to find me standing amidst the mess, hands on hips ‘just thinking…’. Finally level two with its boardwalk pathway, gorgeous flight of steps and seating alcove (G’s idea!) was complete. That just left the third stage, the area immediately below the concrete wall.

In ‘just thinking’ mode, my eyes travelled along the wall, planning what I would plant in the two beds this area would contain. They met a crack at the base of the wall. I had known the crack was there. However, it had expanded. Dread crept in as my eyes went up the crack to the top of the wall. At the top, was a yawning gap. The middle section of the wall had popped open, lost its negative slant, and was now vertical. If it shifted just a little more, the whole lot would topple over - onto my new gardens. This was not good. Retaining wall number three was in order and G was duly summoned.

He arrived, resigned to his fate. We just had one problem; I explained as we stood discussing the new wall. The previous evening, as No. 1 son and I had been clearing the wild tangle of Cape Gooseberries from the base of the wall, we had discovered a bumblebee nest. The nest was behind the old wall. As we watched, the bees busily reorientated themselves – after the loss of their landmark Gooseberries – and found the hole in the wall that led to their nest. After a bit of confused buzzing and zooming, they got it sorted and settled back down to bumblebee business, completely ignoring us.
The new wall was to be constructed in front of the old one, and the gap between them backfilled. We are lucky that G is as mad as we are, and agreed that we couldn’t possibly bury the bees and their nest behind the new wall. So, what to do? ‘The blokes’ discussed differing solutions at length and decided the answer was a tunnel from the present entry to the face of the new wall. Great, that shouldn’t be too difficult. Famous last words!

The new wall was built up to the height of the nest’s entry. Initially, a hole was to be cut in the new wall for the tunnel connecting old and new, but No. 1 son found a piece of retaining timber with a large knothole in it. This would make a good front door for the bees, it was decided. Tunnel construction began. A length of PVC pipe was cut to fit, and a flange was cut from an empty olive oil tin. That evening, we sat and waited for the bees to go to bed. They resembled plump jet planes coming in to land on an aircraft carrier as they flew to their front door and waddled back to their nest. After the last one was in, we glued the tunnel into place and spread the flange around the old entry. Problem sorted – so we thought.

Next morning I went down to see how the bees were coping with this latest change. A cloud of confused bees buzzed around in front of the wall. They had exited the tunnel through the knothole, but couldn’t figure how to get back in. The new wall has eight poles; one of which has the knothole beside it, but to the bees it all looked the same. Eventually a few of them flew above the new wall and found the site of their old entry, and after biting at the metal and squirming furiously they found a way in. No.1 son diligently plugged up the holes, caught confused bees in a glass and deposited them at the new ‘door’. Some of them caught on, but others were determined to imitate kamikaze pilots, getting angrier at every attempt to get back into the nest using the old entrance.
I went out and left No. 1 son and the bees to continue their ritual. On arriving home, I found a note from No. 1 son explaining what he had done. He had stapled a square of blue card next to the new entry to give the bees something easier to recognise. As he was away for the night, I was to take the caulking gun and plug the rest of the holes, making sure all of the bees had gone to bed first of course.

Dusk arrived. I went down to the tunnel three times, but the bees were still around, determined to continue working. I sat and waited…and waited. It was cold and windy and muttering to myself, I began to question my sanity. Finally they all retired for the night and I could get to work. I pumped away; filling the holes, hoping the fumes wouldn’t gas the bees. I ripped the piece of cardboard I’d brought down with me into pieces and stuck these over the goo, which sealed the holes. Sitting back, I pondered my handiwork. Surely the little blighters wouldn’t get through that lot. Hmm, maybe some added insurance would be a good idea. Grabbing the spade I buried the tunnel, obliterating any sign of the original entrance. As I rammed the spade into a pile of dirt, I issued a silent challenge to the bees. Let’s see you get through that lot!

As I came inside I marvelled at how well the bees had coped with the disruption to their lives. Not only had they lost their landmarks and entryway, they had put up with digging, hauling, banging, jack hammering and drilling all in close proximity; actually, right on the doorstep, to their nest. They hadn’t been aggressive once, but quietly buzzed past and around whoever was in the vicinity of their nest. What truly remarkable, stoic little creatures.
G thought he had the last word when, on arriving the next morning he told us that he’d read on the Internet that bumblebees used a nest for just one year. Not to be outdone, I let my eyes glaze over and said ‘I’ve been thinking.’

Pukerua Bay, New Zealand.