I have purchased another load of fleece this weekend. It came from Miller's Ark, a fab farm that takes the animals out to visit schools and nursing homes. I contacted them a while ago after attending one of their open days and asked if I could take some of their fleece coming shearing time.
Elizabeth, who runs the place, very kindly agreed to let me take some for the princely sum of £5 each.
I went over to collect them on Bank Holiday Monday at about teatime. They were stored in British Wool Marketing Board bags in the barn....all bundled up and ready to go. There were quite a lot of them and it was hard to choose, it took me forever. It would have been easy to go mad and take more than I could process but I had to be realistic...I also have to store them somewhere.
The first one that caught my eye was a black fleece, which I suspected to be the Balwen but when I got home and checked against my breed book turned out to be the least likely. It is a fairly short staple but is very crimpy. I think it may be a Shetland. I am really not sure.
Next I chose a grey one with a long staple but next to no crimp, that I thought may have been a Jacob but again that seems unlikely and may be a Herdwick...I really am not sure.....again!
I picked up a white fleece next with a long staple but quite crimpy. It is so soft. This may be the Portland.
I have taken some photos of the fleece and I think I will have to ask Elizabeth if she can identify the fleece. I would love to know what I have come away with!
As the fleece have been freshly shorn they are quite greasy but the grease is so much more pleasant when it is fresh. They were also quite damp as it had been raining a lot and then may have been sweating in the bag. I have since aired and dried them a bit, they still feel damp but I think this may be down to the grease. You certainly know when you have handled it! They have now all been put into old duvet covers until such time as I can get around to picking over them and processing them.
Wednesday, 9 May 2012
Wednesday, 2 May 2012
Stuff I have been making with my handspun wool
Monday, 30 April 2012
'Batt Beards'
You may be wondering what on earth a 'Batt Beard' is...as you can see from the picture above it is when your nearest and dearest has a few beers and takes a batt (that you just happen to be walking around with in your bag) and decides that the bloke standing in the corner of the pub with his rather splendid home grown beard needs some company.
I think I may have a run on at Christmas for Santa Beards!
Monday, 23 April 2012
First Fleece
Raw Ryeland Fleece
It was a little bit too early for shearing to start so the best I could come up with was a year old Ryeland fleece. I went off to Arborfield to collect it and although I know that sheep live in fields and have a propensity to keep poo (amongst other things) in their fleece, I was quite shocked at just how smelly and claggy they really are. I haggled on the price and got it down from £20 to £15....just to cover the cost of the shearing.
I had done my homework albeit on a computer and reading various books so I knew what to look for in theory. I wish I had had the benefit of having my tutor, Carol, with me as she would have known what she was doing.
I got it home and decided to start processing it there and then. I read the advice from my drum carder and ran some very hot water to soak a small sample in. I left it there for a while and then tipped that water out and ran some fresh with a small squeeze of washing up liquid (literature all suggests 'Dawn' dish detergent but we don't seem to have this in the UK so I opted for Waitrose's own!). I left that again for a while and rinsed it. It was a small ball of pristine white fluffiness....such a difference from the mucky, stinky thing I started off with. I did a larger batch in the same manner which I then had to leave to dry before I could start playing. The drying had to be done inside as it has been raining non-stop the last few weeks...apparently this is no bad thing as drying outside could felt the wool if you aren't careful.
The next morning I started to card the dry wool. Still more bits coming out of it....bits of straw and twigs. What I was left with was a rather lovely fluffy batt that was ready to spin. The wool had greyed a little when it had come off the drum carder but I put this down to it being new and the metal of the teeth staining the wool (it came out in the wash thankfully).
I have now washed the whole fleece...I couldn't have it sitting around in the house plus I really wanted to get cracking with it. I have spun a good five skeins thus far and they are coming out OK but seem to have a good few lumps and bumps which could be down to second cuts being processed with the bulk of the fleece. I should perhaps have been a little more meticulous in my pre-wash preparations. I didn't really do anything to them apart from the one batch that I picked the chaff out of. Other cardinal sins included agitating the water with the wool in it (impatience on my part) which again would have resulted in felt had I not been handling Ryeland fleece which is aparently reasonably tolerant of such things.
The keeper of the sheep, a lady called Lorna, has said that I could reserve this year's fleece from the same sheep and also that she has some Soay Sheep that will need rooing in July time. This is very exciting!
Monday, 9 January 2012
Wind Turbine Birthday Cake
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| Alex's First Wind Farm |
The 25th of December, apart from being Christmas Day is also the day on which my partner, Alex, was born. As this year's birthday was a bit of a landmark (30th birthday) we decided that we would have a party to celebrate. Only problem is that it being on Christmas Day, no one is likely to come.
After long discussions we decided that it would be best to have it at the beginning of December in order to maximise the attendance! Moving the party away from Christmas meant that I could finally bake Alex a birthday cake....which meant it had to be special.
I was chatting on Facebook with one of Alex's colleagues when the birthday cake subject came up. I asked him what he thought I should do. Alex works in Wind Power and Matt thought that making a birthday cake featuring wind turbines would be a great idea.......as did I. The only problem now was I had to make it.
I thought long and hard about how I was going to achieve this, bearing in mind I am no sugar artist.....I can't even bake an even cake! The first idea was to make the cake in the shape of a wind turbine. That would be too easy.
Then I thought about making wind turbine shaped candles.......too difficult.
Then I thought about making 30 model wind turbines out of bakeable modelling clay and making a dent in the top for the candles.......so I went to the craft shop to buy some clay.
Brushstrokes at Holme Grange Craft Village, just outside Wokingham, is a little treasure trove containing bits and pieces for all sorts of crafts. I mooched about in there for ages, primarily looking for the modelling clay but stumbling across all sorts of things before I got to them.
I picked up some food colourings for the icing, some model boats and tractors, some edible glitter (quite where I was going to put that I have no idea, I just had to have it!) and some silver candles but I still couldn't find the clay.
I asked at the counter and the lady pointed me in the right direction which is when I found they only had 4 packets of grey modelling clay which I didn't think was enough. I started chatting with the lady, who clearly thought I was bonkers and thought I didn't have a clue what I was doing....and she was right. It was then that she had a brainwave.
Make the blades and the nacelles (the twirly bits) and make a hole in it for the candle to go through.
This could work......I could do this!
A short while later I was back at home and making the various components I needed. It took a while because the clay is quite hard to get into a workable state. So hard, in fact that my hands were in quite a bit of pain by the end of it!
Each nacelle I made had to be skewered with the candle to make the hole for the candle to go through. I couldn't bear to have to drill holes in them all once they had been baked so this seemed the easiest option. All I had to do then was bake them.
| The 'blades' and 'nacelles' prior to baking. Note the holes for the candles. |
The next task was to stick the 'blades' onto the 'nascelles'. I did this with superglue gel. Some of them stuck easier than others. Once those had dried off I put the candles through the holes.
The cakes were the next job. We were expecting 30+ people to come to the party, so there were a lot of mouths to feed. I wanted to create a landscape of both sea and land to represent the onshore and offshore aspects of the wind industry....also Alex was about to move from onshore to offshore.
I baked a very simple round vanilla sponge to make a Victoria Sandwich and a square chocolate cake that I filled with buttercream and chocolate sauce.
The square cake was then covered in a blue buttercream to make the sea. The Victoria Sandwich was cut in half and covered in green fondant icing (the ready-to-roll stuff) to make hills. The hills were placed behind the sea and to cover up the area between land and sea I crushed some ginger biscuits to make a sandy beach. Then I erected my 'wind farm'. the 30 turbines went in anywhere and everywhere although I did try to make it look orderly!
| Finished Wind Farm Cake |
OK, it's not the best looking cake in the world.....but it was a bit of fun and raised a laugh or two! It even tasted good!
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