Thursday, November 6, 2025

Celebrating Ring Cycles


Day 25: I slowed down quite a bit right here at the end, partly because I was working on a couple of new projects, but more to the point, I didn't want this thoroughly enjoyable project to be over. "Ring Cycles" is my first venture into English paper piecing (EPP), and is entirely hand-sewn. I started it on August 16. I was immediately surprised at how quickly it came together, although the large rings didn't truly reveal themselves until I had it a third of the way assembled. I'd studied several methods for assembly on line, and all seemed to have drawbacks, so I invented my own. Starting by making six 9-patches, I then added a triangle to the left side of each. One by one, I installed them around one of the hexagonal centers to form what I referred to as a "unit." Before I could add a second unit, it was necessary to sew on two "cat's-ears" (triangles) to make a nest for the new unit to fit into. Likewise, some partial units were created and sewn in as fillers to make the edges less curvy. The goal was to never have to fit a triangle into a deep V, and my order of assembly prevented that entirely. I honestly don't think I could improve on the method. It went very smoothly, and allowed me to make pinpoint "meets" (the places where corners join). Now "Ring Cycles" moves into the queue to be backed and batted, and in the meantime, "Autumn Oranges" will occupy the Q-Snap frame, and hopefully, I'll be able to keep Merry from using it as a trampoline.

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Lung Lichens


Day 24: I've been back and forth many times on the correct identification of this common lichen because I'm too lazy to break out the chemicals to do the spot tests to determine whether it's Lobaria oregana or L. linita. Suffice to say that it is one of the "lung lichens," and that appellation applies across quite a few species. The common name derives from one of two (perhaps both) characteristics: its resemblance to lung tissue (although green), and its preference for unpolluted air. Lung lichens aren't quite as fussy as some Usneas in that regard, but they're still a good indicator. Deer and other ruminants consider lung lichens prime forage, and no wonder. Lobaria pulmonaria (another species) can provide up to one ton of browse (dry weight) per hectare.

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Making a Grapevine Wreath


Day 23: It's been donkey's years since I made the grapevine wreath on the left. Seriously, like for thirty years that wreath has hung on my front door except at Christmastime when I replace it with a fake evergreen swag. And almost every year for the last dozen, I've said to myself, "I need to make a new wreath," an idea which invariably got back-burnered until the vines had become too dry to manipulate. Even at the best of times, grapevines are fragile. They snap at the joints if you look at them crosseyed, so making a wreath is an exercise in patience. I usually start with one of the most flexible pieces, preferably one which will form a circle the size I want, overlapping about halfway. Then I add a second one, trying not to force it to bend too much, maybe only crossing the original circle twice for an 18" wide wreath. And that's key: don't try to do a lot of wraps. For subsequent additions of vine, I thread the heavier end through a gap in the first pair until it's about a third of the way through. Then I take it around the pair once (twice if it's behaving), before starting to work on the free (thinner) end. Take the tip of the thin end through the center and, working backwards toward the thick end, gently coerce the wrap to lay close to the original pair. Once you've achieved that without hearing any telltale snaps, take the tip through the center again and repeat the process. Be gentle! And take it slowly. When I am nearly done wrapping the wreath, I will search out a few vines with "curls" for embellishment. Over the years, my old wreath lost all but one of its curls, so I left loads of them on the new one.

Monday, November 3, 2025

Spoolie


Day 22: All signs point to this being a thin holiday season for many families, so perhaps it's time to return to a simpler life. In the era of my childhood, receiving a doll for Christmas was a real treat among the practical gifts of socks and school clothes. Handmade gifts were the rule rather than the exception, and I don't recall one dearer to my heart than Spoolie. This is not the original. It disappeared over a series of moves and was long gone by the time I left home at the ripe old age of 12. This is a modern version, as close to the one my mother made as I could get when I built it over fifty years ago from my scant hoard of wooden spools. That's how much I loved Spoolie. What kid today could put the same emotional investment in something so simple? It may be time to rethink our values.

Sunday, November 2, 2025

Lambie-pies!


Day 21: Anyone who's been around me for any length of time will know that I do not like beef, i.e., "dead cow." I eat hamburger as filler in things like spaghetti and Spanish rice, but I don't particularly care for the taste. Steak revolts me. Pork is good, yes. Chicken, yes. And lamb...especially as lamb-burger...absolutely! John Kirkwood has an excellent recipe for "Scotch Pies" (as he calls them) on YouTube. He puts the lamb/onion filling in hot-water pastry, which makes this a fairly easy dish to prepare, although it is more time-consuming than my customary one-pot, five-minute cookery. I was hungry for "lambie-pies," so I invested part of my Thanksgiving dinner allotment in a pound of ground lamb and spread it out in 75-gram portions (cooked) into five pies, each to be topped with cornstarch gravy made from the broth in which the filling was cooked. Even at the current cost of lamb, this comes in at roughly $2.50 per pie, crust included. As luxury dinners go, this is a winner.

Saturday, November 1, 2025

Stropharia Season


Day 20: For all of the fact that we've had several drenching rains, the subsurface soil is still quite dry, as I discovered when digging down to the level where I wanted to anchor some gooseberry branches with an eye to propagating by soil layering. That also accounts for the shortage of 'shrooms under Big Doug, a spot which is usually deckled with Stropharia ambigua. As a general rule, Questionable Stropharia sprouts abundantly throughout my yard, and yet this year, I have only found this one. Why "Questionable" you might be wondering? Its edibility has not been definitively determined. You would think that would be a fairly easy thing to sort out, especially if there were a few dead mushroomers cluttering up the landscape, but the jury remains out on this showy species. Some authorities say that it is not poisonous, but also not desirable; others claim that it causes gastric upset. With mushrooms, it is always best to err on the side of caution, and besides, they make such attractive specimens for photography.

Friday, October 31, 2025

In Front of Yew


Day 19: In the thirty-plus years I've lived here, my English yew hedge has only produced berries half a dozen times or so, and always just a few...or so I thought. Sometimes, it pays to look in front of Yew. I don't know why, but this morning I was inspired to walk around to the roadward side and...well, it kinda looked like Christmas. Admittedly, there's only one female in the entire line of shrubbery which forms my hedge, but it was "berrying" like crazy. Yew berries are poisonous, and the oils in the bark and needles can cause skin irritation or other allergic reactions. Birds don't eat the fruit, but one year, a robin nested deep in the heart of the hedge. I've given up trying to keep the yews pruned back. The hedge is ten feet tall and almost as wide at this point.