Today’s post is a preview of a super awesome ( i hope ) series i’ll be writing up at the end of the month. Although the only children i plan on having myself are covered in fur and fiber, my human sister is pregnant! I’m already a proud aunt of 4 neices and nephews from my older half sisters, but this little baby will be the first from my other set of sisters (hint, i technically have 4 sets of two sisters yet am an only child….). I was so looking forward to living close to my sister, Mandie when i moved back to Oregon last year….. and then she moved to Wisconsin. Then Montana.
Regardless of her distance, i’m stoked to meet the new little nephew and took over the invitation portion of her baby shower that’s coming up this month. I threw in some artsyness, as per usual and think i came up with an idea that is worth sharing with the world. So, watch for the series coming later this month, and get ready for the photos to go viral on Pinterest! 😉
Very Special Invitations
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Fiber Fridays: The Black Sheep Gathering!
It does not get much more “fibery” than a huge fiber show! We headed to Eugene last weekend for the Black Sheep Gathering, held annually in June at the Fairgrounds. There was SO much to look at, so many people to talk to, so much to learn and so many skeins of yarn and roving just begging to be touched! I think i’m still brain dead, but i must at least post some favorite photos from the Gathering, and finally unveil my blue ribbon winning Fiber Friends!
We started our Friday at the Fiber Arts counter and submitted my two little entries for the contest. From there we spent the next SIX hours wandering the booths, sheep pens and demonstrations, absorbing as much information as possible and even spending a little money. I ended up bringing home a skein of Alpaca/Silk roving to spin and ply with some of the luscious cashmere cloud i also bought to spin. I’m almost done with the cashmere and can’t wait to try out the Alpaca/Silk blend and see how they jive together. I also found some tools that i’ve been shopping for a while, including a killer deal on tons of felting needles: yeah! There were far too many choices of fiber and yarn to choose from, so i abstained from the most part, which our checkbook appreciated. I think the highlight of our day was striking up a conversation with some Cashmere Goat farmers, and coming to the conclusion that we may just have to raise some of those with our dairy goat herd. Or Pygoras. I still can’t decide. 😉
On Saturday, my husband and i took a natural dying class together and learned the basics of mordanting and dying with some plants and mushrooms. We’re both very excited to do some experimenting in the years to come and i cannot wait to wear some hand knit, hand spun, hand/naturally dyed garments!
It was so much fun to see the different breeds of sheep in person, though i wished there were more goats than just Angoras to look at. The Jacob Sheep were really fascinating and totally piqued my interest… Do we have another breed in the running for the Rommel ranch? Maybe so.
Needless to say, i’m still exhausted but had so much fun hanging out with all the other “fiber people.” We’re an odd bunch, and it’s fun to be around so many other folks who even know what “roving” is and can truly appreciate all the different shapes and styles of spinning wheels and spindles. Next year… a knitting class! Check out my Flickr Stream for tons more photos of the gathering.
And without further ado: here is my blue ribbon entry, two little Pembroke Welsh Corgis herding their fuzzy butts off:
These little guys are also this week’s featured Fiber Friends. That’s right, they’re for sale! I’m keeping the ribbon, though 😉 I’m selling them without their “stage” so you can play with them and challenge those herding corgis by placing the sheep in hard to reach places. They can handle it! That large wether will do his best to scamper away, but i think the tri will best him in the end. Check them out, along with all my other felted critters on Etsy.
Filed under Events, Fiber Friends, Fibers
More Power
Remember all those chickens i culled for a friend a few months back? She needed her flock thinned and Pocket needed food, so I stepped in to do the dirty work. Since then, a few more animals have met their demise at Blakesley Creek Farm, including Abraham, the 4 year old (ish) Wensleydale ram. **Note, the following pictures are somewhat graphic.
I received a call from Lois asking if i wanted to help kill and butcher her ram who was swollen, bloated and otherwise displeased with life. I must admit, i didn’t want to. A lamb here, a rabbit there, chickens anytime: small animals i’m game to slaughter and butcher, but a giant ram is too much for me. So, some other friends helped her out and it was decided that the meat was no good for people to eat, but probably (hopefully) safe for the dogs. After getting a few tastes, Pocket became completely OBSESSED with the ram meat, so i brought the husband out and tackled the frozen rib cage and leg bones with some power tools to cut into pocket sized portions, while my friends relaxed and watched us work. There was frequent mention of “You know you’re a redneck when you spend your Sunday sitting around in lawn chairs watching your friends saw apart a frozen ram carcass (while eating a vegetarian burrito)!” Pretty hilarious.
Cleaning off the power tool was a nasty job fit for a husband, while i packaged the meat up and stored it in our NEW CHEST FREEZER. Pocket has been eating well: 1 or 2 days a week she gets the big boned ram meat and the rest of her days she gets Foster Farms chicken frames and local mixed-species organs. She’s almost done shedding and will be ready for some photo ops soon. 
What do you do with livestock or other animals that die on your farm? Feed them to other livestock/animals, bury them, take them to the dump?
Filed under Dog Nutrition, Dogs/ Corgis, Livestock
Brain Dead
Wowee, the Black Sheep Gathering was so awesome. I want to post all about it and share some of the rad things we learned, but my brain is still fuzzy from all the input and i have to go to work today. SO here are the highlights to be elaborated on later this week:
- I got a blue ribbon!
- We’re pretty sure we’ll be adding a few cashmere or pygora wethers to our dairy goat flock (herd?)
- Dying yarn with mushrooms is totally awesome
- Fiber people are major dorks, in a really great sort of way
- It rains entirely too much in Eugene
- Choosing a skein of roving out of millions of skeins is incredibly difficult
That’s all for now. I hope you had as great of a weekend as i did. As a note: my next few weeks are pretty busy with baby shower preparations, backed up orders and a children’s book that needs finishing up so i may not be posting with regularity. I”m sure most of you are out in your gardens or playing with the kids anyway and won’t even miss me. I WILL post some pictures of my prize winning sculptures soon, though (and they’ll be available on Etsy!)

































