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AND I STILL DON'T HAVE ANY NEW YARN!!!!!

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After all the hassles of Joann.com and the extra yarn for this I decided to run to Michaels yesterday afternoon to pick up the 2 skeins I need to finish the blanket. I'm using Bernat Baby Coordinates, which is the sort of widely-available acrylic yarn one finds almost everywhere. Except at Michaels. I don't know if Boise has recently experienced a knitting stampede or if Michael's is discontinuing yarn, but they had very little yarn and certainly not the one I was looking for. No problem, I thought, I'll check at Hancock Fabrics just a mile or two away. Nothing--I don't think they even carry Bernat. Not that I think they deserve my business, but there is a Joann Fabrics next to the Hancock Fabrics store and frustration often overrides peevishness, so I did stop in, but they didn't have any yarn of any sort. All my peevishness was restored and then some. The point of true desperation had arrived: I went to Walmart. I loathe everything about Walmart. Trade...

The One Day Window, or A Tale of Four Companies

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After a year of not buying any yarn, I allowed myself certain purchases on January 1: 1. A reward sweater from me for the whole cat ordeal 2. A birthday sweater for Andy 3. a shawl for my mother as her retirement present 4. yarn to finish a pink blanket for one of my nieces. That was the plan. To achieve this was going to take 4 different online orders. 1. WEBS . The yarn I wanted was on back order, but I placed the order anyway. I also ordered a #9 circular needle because I really dislike the one I have. The same day, I received a confirmation from them, then the following day I received a personal email from them telling me the yarn was on back order, but they would process the rest of my order ASAP, then I received another email shortly after saying it had shipped, and I am currently in possession of my new circular needle, and looking forward to the yarn whenever it arrives. Great service as usual, but no yarn yet. 2. Elann.com . The yarn I wanted for Andy's sweater is...

A Little Different Than I Expected

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So, I actually thought that life would get a little bit easier around here with Theo's cast off, didn't you? He was moving around so well that I thought they'd take the cast off and he'd be thrilled and would start using the leg immediately. Obviously, it's been years since I broke a bone and have never had an injury this serious. The cast is indeed off, and his leg muscles are atrophied and sore, and there is so much scar tissue built up around the ankle joint that he can't bend it right now. With a little coaxing, he will lower it to the ground but without any weight: Through all the frustrations of the casts, his leg didn't really hurt (except when he ripped casts off repeatedly). Now, it does hurt when he uses his leg, which scares him, which makes it worse. So, today he's confined to the bedroom (we moved the mattress to the floor several weeks ago), and I spray the room with kitty pheromones every 8 hours to calm him down. The vet gave me som...

Things I Learned From The "Year of the Stash"

As I embark on the second year of knitting (and sewing) only from stash--and take others with me this time--I thought it appropriate to reflect on what (if anything) I learned last year: 1. I do not need to buy all clearance yarn. Sharing with other knitters makes me a better person. And saves me money. And might grow their stashes to be as big as mine. 2. No matter how large it is, a yarn stash really doesn't keep the house warmer 3. When buying fabric for the first time in almost a year, it would have been wiser to not attend a fabric sale unsupervised. 4. If it's been in the stash long enough, it can be hard to use up a really nice yarn. You have a history together--often longer than most marriages. 5. Once you stop being a buy-as-you-need-it knitter, there's no going back. 6. Freud was wrong. I have never met a woman who suffers from penis envy, but a lot of us do experience stash envy 7. Knitting up bulky weight yarn frees up a lot more space than lace yarn....

Tomorrow Is The Big Day!!!!!

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At 1:00 tomorrow--or earlier if Theo can manage it--the cast comes off for good!!!!! The last one has finally defeated Theo, though if you notice how long his leg looks he has managed to slide it down his leg about an inch and a half now. The horrible pink cherry-flavored antibiotics ended this morning, which is just as well as the bandaids ran out today too: We thought we were through a few days ago as the original prescription said to give the blasted things for 10 days. Last week I had to get a refill because of all the medication that had been splattered on the walls, carpet, clothing, sheets, and floor, and when I double-checked that bottle it said to give it for 14 days. When I called the clinic, they couldn't reach the vet so they said to go ahead with the 14 days. Easy for them to say. Theo has been a great sport about all of this, but he finally really started to struggle against this one. I don't blame him. The doses were more than three times anything I'd g...

Going "Cold Sheep"

The best way to make crazy things seem normal is to get people to do them with me.  (Just ask Andy about the month-of-not-buying-anything-new project) As I embark on Year of the Stash Part 2, I have started a thread on Ravelry's Stashdown group for people who also want to go "cold sheep" on yarn purchases this year. I have tried yarn budgets, I have tried buying yarn in moderation, but I can't do it. For me, it's all or nothing, so for the second year in a row, it's "cold sheep" for me! And this time, I'm taking people with me! I know a lot of knitters have huge stashes and enjoy them, revel in them, draw inspiration from them. I have a huge stash and I'm slightly afraid of it. What if it smothers a cat? Is it a fire hazard? What if it attracts a colony of moths? What if I can't knit it all during my lifetime? How long until it needs its own living space? For me, knitting from stash only accomplishes two things: 1. sav...

Year of the Stash Part One - How Did I Do?

For 10 months, I sewed only from stash--which meant sewing a lot less even though the fabric stash is frightening--and knitted only from stash all year--which meant knitting more. Odd how that one worked out. I bought 7 balls of yarn to finish projects, so I had a net stash reduction of 111 balls. That would be even more impressive if I hadn't purchased 75 balls last December in preparation for the Year of the Stash. Still, that is still a net decrease of 36 balls and ALL progress in that direction is good. I seriously suspect that I have about a 10-year supply of yarn in my stash, so doing a second year of knitting from only stash (now that my window of purchasing is over and once I order that darn licorice yarn when it's in stock again) might finally make a visible dent in the stash. Could I eliminate one of the rubber tubs? Maybe two?????? It's January--hope springs eternal!!! Especially where merino is concerned......