This is the 15th year of continuous daily publication for 365Caws. All things considered, it's likely it will be the last year as it is becoming increasingly difficult for me to find interesting material. However, I hope that I may have inspired someone to a greater curiosity about the natural world with my natural history posts, or encouraged a novice weaver or needleworker. If so, I've done what I set out to do.
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Bark Of The Pacific Madrone
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Basic Weaving
This is basic two-shed weaving. Heddle harnesses one and three are raised alternately with harnesses two and four, creating a simple over-and-under weave. Other patterns are possible with this threading if different treadles are depressed, the most recognizable being a basic twill, treadled 1-4, 1-2, 2-3, 3-4. We'll save pattern weaving for the next warp!
Monday, November 28, 2011
Sneak Preview
So far, we've been largely concerned with the warping of the loom. Now the weft (web) threads and the shuttles come into play. There is always a certain degree of draw-in at the selvages, and the blue threads seen at the bottom of the photo serve to establish the working width of the piece. They will be removed once the cloth is taken off the loom and a fringe will be tied with the warp ends. The "tails" at the color changes will be cut short, and once the piece has been fulled (washed to plump up the weaving threads), the joins will not be noticeable.
Fully Dressed Loom
Dressing The Loom
After the threads have been drawn through the heddles, they are also pulled through the reed, a rigid metal separator held in the beater bar. Again, strict order must be observed. Once the threading is completed, the warp bundles are tied off in front of the beater and the leash sticks are removed from the warp. The warp bundles are then tied to the cloth (front) roller keeping an even tension throughout.
The next step is what you've been waiting for: WEAVING!
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Chicken Soup Warping Method
The warp is sectioned off and a can is suspended from each section, barely above floor level. When the full width is weighted, the weaver then winds the threads onto the back beam (or front, if you load the loom in the opposite manner) until the cans are directly below the breast beam but not touching it. The knots are undone and the cans are again attached just above floor level, allowing the weaver to wind approximately two feet of warp between adjustments. Sheets of paper or cardboard should be wound between layers of threads on the warp beam to help keep the tension uniform.
It is important to shake out the threads with each re-tie. Do not comb them with your fingers. Simply shake them and tug on them gently until the tension equalizes and they straighten out to lie in order in front of the leash sticks. Wind slowly and watch for any loose threads. If they appear, untie the cans and readjust. When the warp is fully wound onto the back beam, tie the ends to the front beam and go pour yourself a tall one.
Coming up next: sleying.
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Raddling The Chain
The warp chain is formed as the threads are removed from the warping board. The weaver's hand and arm serve as a giant crochet hook pulling one loop after another up through the previous one. In the warping system I use, the end of the warp chain is attached to the back beam roller by means of a dowel. With the leash sticks holding the warp cross, the threads are then separated onto the raddle. The remaining chain is dropped down in front, wound onto the back beam, and then is ready to be cut and pulled through the individual wire heddles and reed dents in a process called sleying. Winding the chain onto the back beam is best done with an assistant, but can be achieved by weighting sections of warp with soup cans! Once the loom is sleyed, the warp sections are tied to the front (cloth) beam roller and weaving begins. "Neahly deh', Ernie! Take it away!"
Friday, November 25, 2011
Dawn Among Evergreens
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Spinning Llama
Here I am creating a single-ply yarn with an S-twist. Once I have two spindles full, I will combine them for a two-ply yarn using a Z-twist, reversing the direction of the spinning wheel's rotation.
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
220 Ends
The most labour-intensive part of weaving is in the next step: sleying the loom. Each thread end must be drawn through a heddle with a hook, carefully keeping the order in which they were wound on the warping board. Then it's just a matter of sitting down and throwing a shuttle back and forth, beating the thread in place after each throw. The shuttle is propelled back and forth, back and forth through each shed as the weaver rhythmically raises and lowers the harnesses with the treadles. The clatter of a loom in operation is almost hypnotic, and listening to it is a very pleasant way to spend those rainy winter days.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Water Ouzel - Dipper
Cinclus mexicanus (also known as Water Ouzel) is a fairly common sight in upland creeks and streams in the Pacific Northwest and tends to be solitary. I was somewhat surprised to find two at the local kids' fishing pond today when I went down to survey the floodwaters in the Mashell. The rain was pouring down, but these birds were as happy as could be among the drops and splashes. I'm glad someone enjoys the rain!
Monday, November 21, 2011
You Don't Se!
You si, it should properly read "Se habla español." You se the word a little differently than you would se "si" ("if" or "whether"), and you say it differently than you would se "sÃ" ("yes"). I am truly confused by the meaning of this, although I certainly can sà the humour in it.
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Missus In Winter
Mister and Missus have staked out my feeding station once again, and this morning arrived together for a breakfast of dog kibble steeped in bacon grease. Missus is the more cautious of the two, often remaining on the fence post to await the treats brought from the board by her bolder mate. Even so, the two of them often play hide-and-seek with me between the rails of the fence in an "I can see you but you can't see me" game. Their caution around me is minimal. They allow me to slide open the door and step out onto the back porch while they're feeding even if they see the camera in my hands. They only fly off if a glint of light sparkles off the lens, or if a Jay gives out a warning call.
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Suspend Your Disbelief
Friday, November 18, 2011
Snow Song
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Strange Woodland Creatures
Every now and then, someone comes up with some cute, clever, innovative, unusual or otherwise memorable idea for a hide. This one certainly qualifies. It was hidden in young reprod forest, only a few feet from the road and almost invisible where it was sunk in a small hollow. I had been looking for something like a pile of sticks behind a stump, so spotted the bright purple lid of the container first. Then as my gaze lifted, I burst out laughing. It's amazing what you can miss when your focus is fine-tuned to seek something else.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Steller's Jay
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Carpe Diem, Carpe Carpem
This morning, he was intent on breakfast. From the far side of the pond, I took several photos and saw him make one dive into the water, emerging fishless and returning to his position on the corner of the dock railing. I walked slowly around the pond, hoping to get a better view before he flew off. I needn't have worried! Not only did he stay on watch for a hapless fish, he kept his back to me as if he didn't know I was there. I took this photo from about ten feet away. Even when I spoke to him, he only turned his head long enough to give me the woolly eyeball and then resumed his breakfast vigil.
Monday, November 14, 2011
Bamboo
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Ganesha
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Grandpa's Little Black Cat
Lest anyone think my grandmother hard-hearted in this regard, she held nothing in particular against cats. She simply felt that their place was out-of-doors. I'm sure she would have issued an equivalent proscription against a dog as well. In fact, Grandma had a beautiful ceramic cat, still in my possession, somewhat battered and missing portions of both ears, a larger version of Grandpa's little black cat shown here. Both ceramic cats enjoyed the comforts of the family hearth.
Today, I admit a partiality to black cats, moreso since learning that at shelters, they are the least likely to be adopted. Perhaps the reasoning behind that is the same as that behind the superstition surrounding them: they're hard to see in the dark.
Friday, November 11, 2011
Button Box
I know they had stories to tell, but I was young and not interested in histories when I had them in my hands. Some may have belonged to Old-old, the great-grandmother who sewed meticulous quilts with her bent, arthritic fingers. Did she smell of lavender? My sense of her is dim. The buttons smelled of Yardley’s, and so clearly is my grandmother illustrated by that scent that I cannot separate its fragrance from her image.
The room is dimly lit, a bedroom, and the precious box of buttons has been opened as a rare and special pleasure. They tumble out upon the thick bedspread, falling helter-skelter like a scattering of runes unread. Two draw me. One is an obvious choice for a child: a “diamond” set in black Bakelite. The other is broken, unique among its fellows and a riddle: why is it there, preserved in its uselessness? The child does not formulate the question in the button, and its answer is lost in dead years. I touch each one, carefully and separately, to acknowledge its individual presence. I am baptized as an animist at the ripe old age of four, and the souls of buttons address me with a quote from lavender.
My grandmother gathers the existential buttons and returns them to their box. I will see them only once again in life.
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Swofford Pond
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
A Lesson In Logger Grammar
A feller (fellow) who fells or falls trees is either a faller or a feller, depending on the custom of his particular area. In this case, the jury seems to have stilll been out on the subject, but as I was taking the photo, I definitely heard the sound of timber falling...CRASH!...and it was preceded by the sound made by someone using a chainsaw to fell a tree...WHRRRRRRRRRRRR! The felling preceded the falling, at least in one interpretation. Grammatically, I don't think it would have worked quite as well the other way around.
So now the question remains: does the feller who falls trees fill trucks any fuller than the faller who fells trees fills them? Sigh. It's all so confusing, I simply can't foller it at all.
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
The Mountain Rises
Monday, November 7, 2011
Red Coral, Ramaria Araiospora
I have identified this as Ramaria araiospora, a member of the family of coral fungi. As such, it is not common. There were several colonies of it growing in one area just off the Trail of the Shadows at Longmire, but none as shockingly visible as this specimen. It is the first of its kind that I have encountered, although other corals occur quite frequently in our forests. Purportedly edible, I would never dream of picking such an unusual species.
Labels:
Coral fungus,
Longmire,
MORA,
Ramaria araiospora,
Trail of the Shadows
Sunday, November 6, 2011
White On White Memory
Having lived with a selection of parrots over the course of my life, my husband suggested getting a Cockatoo when his special friend Carlo passed from the Earth. Carlo was "Papa's Parrot!" and would tell you so volubly, as if you had any doubt, and tolerated me only in Papa's absence. We got along fine as long as Bruce wasn't around, but Carlo became very possessive as soon as he walked through the door. However, things changed when Cocoa entered our lives. He was a trusting little fellow who greeted all and sundry with the same cheerful love, but it was to me that he attached himself most firmly.
He has been gone a number of years, and the memories I hold of him are strong and precious...the visits to my fishing buddy's where he ate neatly from the bowl of pistachio nuts on the kitchen counter, returning each empty shell to the dish...imitating me in applying mayonnaise to artichoke leaves even though it meant a walk around from the other side of the table...trying to fly off with a newly opened can of tomato sauce...making himself purposefully dizzy by spinning on the kitchen scale and then going all silly when he tried to effect the drunkard's walk along the narrow space in front of the sink.
He did not have an erect crest as many Cockatoos do. Being a Goffin, the long feathers on his head lay flat against it until something provoked his curiosity. Then he would raise it, revealing a peach-pink base which was invisible when it was recumbent. We called it his "Question Mark," for such was the duty it served, and this feather, treasured among my possessions, is one query from a bright child who is now a memory.
Hard Frost
The deciduous trees are shedding their red and gold garments with some haste now, anxious to divest themselves of ice catchers and snow scoops. A little gust sets a shower of crimson flying from the dogwood. If the frost persists, the brush line across the road will quickly be a network of bare branches, wooden lace ready to be starched with snow.
Saturday, November 5, 2011
Rainey Creek Nature Walk
At Rainey Creek, the road terminates abruptly and becomes a footpath crossing a sturdy metal bridge. Beyond the bridge, the way opens out into an acre of grassland, the trail following the edge until it reaches forest on the opposite side. It passes over another smaller creek there, debouches into grassland again for a few hundred yards and then climbs into timber for the remainder of its transit through the Cowlitz Wildlife Area. A gate on the opposite end likewise prevents vehicles from entering from the paved haul road. I seldom see anyone on this little-known nature walk, and today it was apparent that no foot had disturbed the carpet of leaves for quite some time. A chill was in the air, so I turned back shortly beyond little Rainey Creek, scuffing through a precipitation of alder leaves with joyous abandon.
Friday, November 4, 2011
Threads Of Childhood
"The Churkendoose" is a social lesson, poor Churkendoose unaccepted by the other barnyard fowl because he was of mixed parentage.
"Well, I'm not a Chicken, and I'm not a Duck.
I have more brains than I have luck.
I'm not a Turkey, and I'm not a Goose.
Can't you see? I'm a Churkendoose!"
and a repeating refrain of
"Can't you like me just because I'm me?"
He gains the other animals' admiration when he saves them from a fox.
"The Color Kittens" Hush and Brush painted the world in all the colors we know today. Short on green,
"they wanted green paint, of course, because nearly every place they liked to go was green."
They finally accomplished their task and then, frisky kittens that they were, they got a bit too pouncy and spilled all the paint together, making brown.
"And in all that brown, the sun went down. It was evening and the colors began to disappear in the warm dark night." The text is a presentation of color theory at a child's level and the illustrations are delightful.
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Still Life With Peppers
A good friend often serves as a judge in Chili Cookoffs, so I asked her if she had a recipe for Chili Verde, one of my favorite restaurant dishes. She directed me to a website where I could pick and choose from several in the hopes of finding something I could adapt to make in a Crock-Pot. Call it a lucky guess, but the first one I tried turned out exactly like the Chili Verde I enjoy at our local Puerto Vallarta restaurant. The green chilis you see here (plus a few more) are destined to participate in the next batch. The red bell peppers will be stuffed for a different meal.
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Toxic Beauty
Amanita muscaria (shown in the image) gained fame and notoriety as a hallucinogen during the Hippie Era. In many cases, the potential toxic effects of the alkaloids, ignored for the instant gratification of a "high," did not appear for years. Symptoms often begin with a patient showing evidence of jaundice and a deeper case history reveals use of hallucinogenic mushrooms forty years previous.
Mushrooms are nothing to mess around with. If you are not 105% certain that a species is edible, do not sample it and do not allow it to come into contact with known edibles in your collection basket.
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
A Few Bolts Away From Warp Speed
Although I made one trip to the hardware store during the reassembly, we're still a few bolts away from warp speed, but other than that and tying up the treadles, the loom is fully operational at this point. It was another gift from the benevolent woman who presented me with an antique spinning wheel a few days ago. Given the condition of the wheel, I'd reserved judgment on accepting the loom until I'd had a chance to look at it. Yesterday, when I saw that it was both modern and in good condition, I was thrilled. However, this is no small object! The two of us couldn't have lifted it ourselves even if I'd had a truck big enough to haul it, so I took it apart to transport. In the process of loading it into my car, the order of pieces was disrupted for the sake of packing, and in the case of the base and apron rollers, pieces rotated until they were not in their original configuration. When I got them all spread out in the living room, it was obvious that I had an engineering project for the day.
There were a few errors and a few cusswords, a barked knuckle or two, a banged head when I raised up under the beater, lost washers and nuts which rolled away under the desk, and of course the layout of my crafts room had to be revised to accommodate its newest resident. Now the loom is the focal point, and I am most certainly looking forward to a winter of weaving.
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