to showy dogwoods, redbuds, lilacs, plums, honeysuckle and so much more on the hillsides.
Have I mentioned that I love Spring!!!
Happy Spring
Boomer's not to sure about the stand. |
Wow, it looks like a carnival! |
Boomer's new clothes - very comfortable for summer. |
Boomer's first fleece. I'm thinking of putting it into the green warp I have on the little loom tonight to weave a Boomer rug. |
Mr. Bones ready to donate his mostly white fleece to the cause. |
Dan-man says, "Just get it over with!" |
Everything grows well in Arkansas, but having to weed the blueberries on March 18 seems a bit extreme. |
All the blueberries are now weeded and re-mulched. |
It was a rock cage, now it is a potato cage. It's about 4-ft. in diameter. |
Set where the old mulch pile was and then lined with belly fleece, to keep the dirt in and the bugs out. Filled with about 6 inches of dirt from the drainage ditches I am trying to create. |
Yukon Gold seed potatoes from North Arkansas Farm Supply. I cut them so that there was one active eye per chunk. This is three pounds. |
Cut potatoes and scattered on top of dirt. |
Then I planted sugar snap peas, also from Co-op, all around the outside of the potato cage. I planted them one inch apart and covered them over about one inch with ver.y wet ditch dirt |
The rainbow chard bed kept us in greens all winter. Looks like dinner tonight. |
Having great fun with COLORS! |
Kolt finally has a lamb! |
A sized P crochet hook works best for crocheting most tshirt rags. Shawn carves and sells these on his website at laffing-horse.com |
A finished Quart Cozy soaks up condensation, gives me a handle to carry my water bottle and cushions the jar. |
Demi in full poof. |
Shearing Demi |
Too much Demi wool for one pillow case. |
Clean and cool and ready to scratch and have babies, in that order! |
Basil says to "get on with it!" |
Cowslip, born in '03, says she'll just nap through shearing. |
The wonderful flower show crew. |
Trim off the seams and the hem. This turtleneck gave me eight hankies, two produce sleeves and a dickie to wear under my work blouses. That''ll be use #5. |
Elizabeth finishing up the birthing process as her little girls figure out the walking thing. |
One of the wee ones gets a drink from mama as big sister Hildy explains to the other two that as soon as they know how to walk good, she'll teach them how to play. |
Boomer's new pen shares a fenceline with the girl's pen. |
Rene' Riggan's applied felting class was the one class that did not require a sewing machine. |
Select a shirt from your box of old shirts. |
Gather shirt, scissors, wool, yarn, glue, a canning jar with metal ring lid. |
Cut your outside wrapping piece a bit bigger than hand-sized. Cut a second piece to wrap your wool in. |
Put your silk wrapped wool into the larger square of silk, pull up the corners and tie with yarn. |
Put any good, allpurpose glue on the top of the ring lid and set it over the silk ball, with the tails coming out the bottom. Mash it down so the glue sticks. Trim the tails to make a neat rosette. |
When the glue is dry, put the lid on the jar and, you have your Ozark pincushion! |
Geo is a great mommy and she has the nicest udder to milk. |
Harley is two days old. She's sure that she is big enough now to climb up the roof like Auntie Ginger. |
Harrah's quite the wee showgirl. She thinks Pequena llama is a good, long-legged role model. |
Lay the shirt you are repurposing out flat and make sure this is one that you don't want to wear any more. |
Cut off the sleeve, following the shape of the arm hole. |
You'll make cuts where I've marked here. I don't mark my shirts, but, if it help you get the hang of what we're doing here, go right ahead. It's also a way to get kids to help. |
Make the top two horizontal cut first. Make sure you leave plenty of fabric above and to the sides of these cuts. They are your handle and lock. They will get more stress than the rest of the bag. |
Fold the sleeve over about 2 inches from the wrist end and make your vertical cuts through both sides of the sleeve. Make them about 1 inch apart, as shown here. |
Turn the sleeve right side out. Go shopping! |