09 December 2009

Knitting stuff...

So, I have been busy over the last few months. Making things. Mostly with knitting needles, although kitchen equipment has featured in the making-things department as well. Kitchen tally was about 12 quarts tomatoes (nice Romas and Amish Paste from our garden) canned, 6 1/2 pint jars of tomato paste, 6 pints yummy Icicle Pickles, 3 pints pickled beets, apple-cranberry butter, strawberry jam...
In the knitting department: fingerless gloves from the pattern in One More Skein, although I have no idea whose hands she measured! Another half-current for bedroom window with one more window to go. Wonderful warm felted slippers - from Drops pattern and a breeze once I figured out the decreases! Making a hat now.. and gearing up for a Guernsey sweater from Traditional Knitting. That will take forever as the gauge is 13 x 17 over 2 inches... fingering weight yarn, I think, is called for.
Of course, all knitting updates are over on www.ravelry.com under my lovely page... AthenaNike.

26 June 2009

after a long hiatus..


A feeling of ... guilt? Nah. Been busy with garden - lots of flowers doing very well this year, and tons of veggies growing well. And, now we're waiting for the kids to arrive - Pearl should kid around the 25th July!

The boys are growing well... Leopold is looking more and more like a buck with a heavier neck and head. Henry is a pill, just like his Alpine counterpart Miss Mossy.

Been knitting away too.. that's all up on www.ravelry.com - especially happy to have the baby shower items done.

05 March 2009

An update..

.. of sorts. I'm really terrible at blogging, journaling, what ever you want to call it. Loads of stuff rambles through my head, I just never take the time to commit it to words..

Added a playlist feature down at the bottom. Not sure it will function as I intended - should autoplay and hasn't seemed to want to do that yet.

Ok - back to work...

16 January 2009

In which reading instructions becomes a virtue

After yesterday's technology debacle (see tweets under NikeBlack, though you'll have to ask permission!) and a non-functioning MP3 player I was ready to throw the thing out. Well, today after hearing that, per the instructions, the MP3 player has to be charged before use and doing so, I am now successfully listening to Elizabeth Peters' Crocodile on the Sandbank. So. ta-da. I have an MP3 player and already have some music tracks on it, and an audio book.

13 January 2009

23 Things wrap up..

Well, it was fun - I enjoyed playing around with Web 2.0 stuff and, especially, finding new things to play with. (just remember I need the next disc of a downloaded audio book! left our heroine on the banks of the Nile... ).

The podcasts and Overdrive were perhaps the most useful thing - at least to me personally. I found some interesting podcasts (other than NPR's) and Overdrive was pretty easy to use.

Technorati, I think, was a bit overrated... well, at least for right now I have no direct use for it. That may change.

I do like learning in this format - somewhat self-directed, some contacts in the virtual space, some in the physical. We certainly enjoyed sharing what we found and were learning here in my library.

09 January 2009

Overdrive!

Not bad - found a title I wanted, checked it out, downloaded it, after a bit of fishing found the overdrive console software to download, and have burned part one to CD ready for me to listen to on the way home!

Based on this experience, I'd shop here again...

Podcast surprise

So, I noodled around on podcast alley and wasn't being particularly impressed by what I was seeing. Finally, I narrowed the list to libraries and found a list of likely podcasting libraries, most of whom are not podcasting regularly.

However, I clicked on the Lansing PL (Illinois, though I thought initially it was the Michigan Lansing) and found a fascinating author talk podcast! Yugoslav born, of German descent, Katherine Hoeger Flotz talked about what it was like to grow up in WW2 Yugoslavia. It wasn't fun. She wrote a memoir A Pebble in My Shoe chronicling her childhood and how she came to America.

This was a real find for me, one I never expected. WW2 has some interest for me as I have relatives who lived through it, on the ground as they say, in Germany. FLotz's account was great to listen too, and the best part was that I could hear what her story in her own words. I certainly never would have known about her otherwise, and going to Lansing IL for the actual program was not an option, even had I known about the program.

Get a playlist! Standalone player Get Ringtones!