I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ...
knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
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I'm here. We have been staying home since mid-March, using delivery and curbside pickups for most of our shopping needs.? I am well aware of our good fortune in being able to work from home, but it is wearing on me that I can't see family in other places.? This is the longest I have ever gone without seeing my children or my mom, but I am thankful for Zoom, Whats App and TinyBeans to stay connected.? I have a group of friends that I have a virtual happy hour with every week, and my siblings and I take turns sharing a song/artist of the day every day.
Not quite as much knitting going on as I would have expected, but we are doing some projects around the house so that we can be ready to sell when we can move to Colorado (home of the grandson, and where DH grew up).?
Patricia in Austin (still)
On Friday, November 13, 2020, 8:00:10 PM CST, erica <knitzz@...> wrote:
I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ...
knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
|
I’m here as well. Outside trips have been for groceries and doctors’ appointments. That’s pretty much it for us. ? Crafting continues. I have been cranking out dishtowels on my Flip and mailing them off to family and close friends as they are finished. ? Haven’t seen the Grands since December (except on FaceTime). Younger son and the Granddog, who live in town, have been here three times (I think) since Christmas. ? ?
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From: [email protected] < [email protected]> On Behalf Of Texknitter via groups.io Sent: Saturday, November 14, 2020 1:20 PM To: [email protected]Subject: Re: [yarnmongers] Friday the 13th check-in ... ? I'm here. We have been staying home since mid-March, using delivery and curbside pickups for most of our shopping needs.? I am well aware of our good fortune in being able to work from home, but it is wearing on me that I can't see family in other places.? This is the longest I have ever gone without seeing my children or my mom, but I am thankful for Zoom, Whats App and TinyBeans to stay connected.? I have a group of friends that I have a virtual happy hour with every week, and my siblings and I take turns sharing a song/artist of the day every day. Not quite as much knitting going on as I would have expected, but we are doing some projects around the house so that we can be ready to sell when we can move to Colorado (home of the grandson, and where DH grew up).? Patricia in Austin (still) On Friday, November 13, 2020, 8:00:10 PM CST, erica <knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ... knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
|
I haven’t seen my parents in a year. I thought I had a plan to go to Wisconsin and isolate at a condo in my parent’s development for five days but we hatched that before things exploded this week. I don’t think I’ll be going anywhere fir quite some time. And we are terribly worried about Miriam’s travel back from Northampton in December- there’s no way to isolate in our little house.?
I’m waiting to retire - they still haven’t even interviewed anyone for my position. I think I’m telling them 1/15 will be a firm “out” day. ?Meanwhile weaving a lot and knitting my Shetland shawl - I started it at the beginning of the pandemic. It’s a race - what will we have first, a finished shawl or a vaccine? For the record I’m not even half done.?
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On Nov 14, 2020, at 10:50 AM, Ann McManus <mcmanusab@...> wrote:
? I’m here as well. Outside trips have been for groceries and doctors’ appointments. That’s pretty much it for us. ? Crafting continues. I have been cranking out dishtowels on my Flip and mailing them off to family and close friends as they are finished. ? Haven’t seen the Grands since December (except on FaceTime). Younger son and the Granddog, who live in town, have been here three times (I think) since Christmas. ? ? ? I'm here. We have been staying home since mid-March, using delivery and curbside pickups for most of our shopping needs.? I am well aware of our good fortune in being able to work from home, but it is wearing on me that I can't see family in other places.? This is the longest I have ever gone without seeing my children or my mom, but I am thankful for Zoom, Whats App and TinyBeans to stay connected.? I have a group of friends that I have a virtual happy hour with every week, and my siblings and I take turns sharing a song/artist of the day every day. Not quite as much knitting going on as I would have expected, but we are doing some projects around the house so that we can be ready to sell when we can move to Colorado (home of the grandson, and where DH grew up).? Patricia in Austin (still) On Friday, November 13, 2020, 8:00:10 PM CST, erica <knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ... knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
|
I'm here too.? I was thinking about going east around Christmas - my nephew & his family were coming from France, and other nephew & family from Thailand, so thought I could see everyone, plus Mom, of course.? I suspect their plans are cancelled - my hometown newspaper was talking about refrigerated semis yesterday....?
Oregon has just called a shutdown of onsite dining at restaurants, and gyms are closed.? I am getting some weaving done, reading a bit, and actually finished a sweater!?
I'm rooting for the vaccine before your shawl, Amy!
Diane
On Saturday, November 14, 2020, 11:17:33 AM PST, Amy Brotslaw Schweiger <brotslaw@...> wrote:
I haven’t seen my parents in a year. I thought I had a plan to go to Wisconsin and isolate at a condo in my parent’s development for five days but we hatched that before things exploded this week. I don’t think I’ll be going anywhere fir quite some time. And we are terribly worried about Miriam’s travel back from Northampton in December- there’s no way to isolate in our little house.?
I’m waiting to retire - they still haven’t even interviewed anyone for my position. I think I’m telling them 1/15 will be a firm “out” day. ?Meanwhile weaving a lot and knitting my Shetland shawl - I started it at the beginning of the pandemic. It’s a race - what will we have first, a finished shawl or a vaccine? For the record I’m not even half done.?
Amy On Nov 14, 2020, at 10:50 AM, Ann McManus <mcmanusab@...> wrote:
?
I’m here as well. Outside trips have been for groceries and doctors’ appointments. That’s pretty much it for us. ? Crafting continues. I have been cranking out dishtowels on my Flip and mailing them off to family and close friends as they are finished. ? Haven’t seen the Grands since December (except on FaceTime). Younger son and the Granddog, who live in town, have been here three times (I think) since Christmas. ? ? ? I'm here. We have been staying home since mid-March, using delivery and curbside pickups for most of our shopping needs.? I am well aware of our good fortune in being able to work from home, but it is wearing on me that I can't see family in other places.? This is the longest I have ever gone without seeing my children or my mom, but I am thankful for Zoom, Whats App and TinyBeans to stay connected.? I have a group of friends that I have a virtual happy hour with every week, and my siblings and I take turns sharing a song/artist of the day every day. Not quite as much knitting going on as I would have expected, but we are doing some projects around the house so that we can be ready to sell when we can move to Colorado (home of the grandson, and where DH grew up).? Patricia in Austin (still) On Friday, November 13, 2020, 8:00:10 PM CST, erica <knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ... knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
|
So far, so good here.? Arielle’s school is still hybrid, but we’ve had an uptick in reported cases in the district in the last week and a half (it’s a pretty small district and they’ve got really robust contact tracing) so I don’t know what’s going to happen there. Boys are still at school; Baird drives home right before Thanksgiving and the school has decided to offer free COVID tests to anyone who wants one before they travel, so I’m going to ask him to get one and have his driving companion do so too.? He is taking winter term off because he’s not going to graduate on time since he took last spring off and hasn’t been happy with how his school is managing the pandemic (though the cases there seem to be coming from off campus, at least until now).? Ezra is hoping to just stay at school over winter break (school is about 25-30% of students on campus), which would keep him out of airports, but no word on that yet. ? Mostly, we’re doing the minimum of shopping that can be done, keeping close contacts to Arielle’s pod of friends, and spending a lot of time hiking and walking, preferably places where there aren’t other people.? My synagogue went back to in-person extremely limited Saturday morning services about a month ago and I took Arielle last week and it was wonderful for both of us, but I don’t know how long that will last. ? Started a sort of new job last week; I’ve worked with these folks for years but when Jemma announced she was engaged in September, I decided that as much as I’d hoped to put off being an employee until Arielle left for college so that I could keep the flexibility I’ve had, the prospect of being without health insurance should Jemma actually get married was too much for me.? It’s slightly odd and kinks are still being worked out (little things like sending me a computer without a license for Microsoft Office) but I think it’ll be fine and my manager has assured me that she doesn’t care when my work gets done because she knows from experience that it will get done, so while I’m giving up some of my flexibility, I’ll be able to keep some amount of it.? ? Doing quite a bit of knitting, but almost no spinning or weaving, both things I’d like to spend more time with.? By the time I get to anything at night, I’m usually too exhausted to think about anything but simple knitting, so I’m trying to remember to be kind to myself about it. ? Having my entire heating system minus the actual boiler (furnace equivalent) replaced this week so I’ve been most of today pulling books out of bookcases where they’ll be working first and trying to purge things as I go.? I’ve run out of room in my trash can, so I’m going to take a break and walk the dogs in the park. ? Melisande ? p.s. Here’s hoping the vaccine beats Amy! ?
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From: [email protected] < [email protected]> On Behalf Of Amy Brotslaw Schweiger Sent: Saturday, November 14, 2020 2:18 PM To: [email protected]Subject: Re: [yarnmongers] Friday the 13th check-in ... ? I haven’t seen my parents in a year. I thought I had a plan to go to Wisconsin and isolate at a condo in my parent’s development for five days but we hatched that before things exploded this week. I don’t think I’ll be going anywhere fir quite some time. And we are terribly worried about Miriam’s travel back from Northampton in December- there’s no way to isolate in our little house.? I’m waiting to retire - they still haven’t even interviewed anyone for my position. I think I’m telling them 1/15 will be a firm “out” day. ?Meanwhile weaving a lot and knitting my Shetland shawl - I started it at the beginning of the pandemic. It’s a race - what will we have first, a finished shawl or a vaccine? For the record I’m not even half done.? Amy ? I’m here as well. Outside trips have been for groceries and doctors’ appointments. That’s pretty much it for us. ? Crafting continues. I have been cranking out dishtowels on my Flip and mailing them off to family and close friends as they are finished. ? Haven’t seen the Grands since December (except on FaceTime). Younger son and the Granddog, who live in town, have been here three times (I think) since Christmas. ? ? ? I'm here. We have been staying home since mid-March, using delivery and curbside pickups for most of our shopping needs.? I am well aware of our good fortune in being able to work from home, but it is wearing on me that I can't see family in other places.? This is the longest I have ever gone without seeing my children or my mom, but I am thankful for Zoom, Whats App and TinyBeans to stay connected.? I have a group of friends that I have a virtual happy hour with every week, and my siblings and I take turns sharing a song/artist of the day every day. Not quite as much knitting going on as I would have expected, but we are doing some projects around the house so that we can be ready to sell when we can move to Colorado (home of the grandson, and where DH grew up).? Patricia in Austin (still) On Friday, November 13, 2020, 8:00:10 PM CST, erica <knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ... knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
|
Happy Diwali to all of you! Today is the day that Hindus believe light triumphed over darkness, good over evil. May the light dispel your darkness and may you have good triumph over evil in your life. In some parts of India, today is also New Year’s day and I also wish you a very safe, happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year!
My Diwali traditions these days are far removed from what I did when I was growing up. Work, the inability to take the day off in the early days of my career (before personal choice or floating holidays), and the demands of raising kids meant that all I ever did here was make sweets and light lamps.?
We’ve been pretty much home-bound since March. My sister occasionally comes over to see my father if she comes upstate. My father would have gone to visit my brother for some months but that hasn’t happened. He is confined to the house except for doctor’s appointments. We go to the grocery store, to the hardware store, and the pharmacy around once a week and most other things are quite rare.
DD was supposed to come at Thanksgiving with an extra two weeks of working from here when she would be quarantining in our house. In her bedroom with access to the other bathroom upstairs and maybe exercising in the basement when we weren’t there. But we canceled due to spikes in her area and in ours. We’ll reschedule when levels are down and not plan but just do it spontaneously.
However, some things have worked out well - I now have a Sat am Zoom call with Ravefry friends from the US, Canada and India. I taught DD to make Indian sweets yesterday so she can celebrate Diwali on her own. My yard is looking good. I’ve been doing some weaving, knitting, spinning, but not as much as I thought I would.?
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On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 9:00 PM erica < knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ...
knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
|
Forgot to add: I am cooking a more experimental menu because I need to plan and I can look up recipes and get ingredients.
Also, we had a very successful cookie exchange a few weeks ago when the weather was nice. A bunch of us retired IBMers met outside on my lawn and had a carefully socially distanced gathering. It was lovely to see people.
I am planning to make Elisenlebkuchen in a few weeks when all the ingredients show up. DH and I loved this when we were in Nuremberg and I’ve tried buying lebkuchen here but it isn’t the same. This is a flourless cookie made with hazelnuts and almonds and the stuff you get here is more like fruitcake. It is complicated as the cookies are baked on edible paper bases. If it works, it might become an annual thing.
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On Sat, Nov 14, 2020 at 5:21 PM Jaya < ermabom@...> wrote: Happy Diwali to all of you! Today is the day that Hindus believe light triumphed over darkness, good over evil. May the light dispel your darkness and may you have good triumph over evil in your life. In some parts of India, today is also New Year’s day and I also wish you a very safe, happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year!
My Diwali traditions these days are far removed from what I did when I was growing up. Work, the inability to take the day off in the early days of my career (before personal choice or floating holidays), and the demands of raising kids meant that all I ever did here was make sweets and light lamps.?
We’ve been pretty much home-bound since March. My sister occasionally comes over to see my father if she comes upstate. My father would have gone to visit my brother for some months but that hasn’t happened. He is confined to the house except for doctor’s appointments. We go to the grocery store, to the hardware store, and the pharmacy around once a week and most other things are quite rare.
DD was supposed to come at Thanksgiving with an extra two weeks of working from here when she would be quarantining in our house. In her bedroom with access to the other bathroom upstairs and maybe exercising in the basement when we weren’t there. But we canceled due to spikes in her area and in ours. We’ll reschedule when levels are down and not plan but just do it spontaneously.
However, some things have worked out well - I now have a Sat am Zoom call with Ravefry friends from the US, Canada and India. I taught DD to make Indian sweets yesterday so she can celebrate Diwali on her own. My yard is looking good. I’ve been doing some weaving, knitting, spinning, but not as much as I thought I would.? On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 9:00 PM erica < knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ...
knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
--
Jaya
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I'm the luckiest of all of you - isolation occasionally has its advantages. My state was blocked to all people from other states, so currently zero deaths & under 50 cases. We experienced town lockdown, with road blocks at the 10 mi point, manned by the army. Empty shelves of greengroceries, meat, and dry goods is still a problem.
It has suddenly become hot! The weekend has been sitting at the 106-110F mark &dropping tothe high 80s overnight. This kind of weather affects my health a little, so it is challenging.
Terminal cancer has been a big thing in my life this pandemic. I have lost knitting friends, my close cousin, & even Mr Boof, the cat; others have had breast cancer & are coming out the other side. As they are knitting pals we made a blanket each, & I have been making neck-wear as a love parcel.
Work is weird right now: I can't complain I am bored, but rather regularly feel overwhelmed & paralysed by sheer volume. My manager had to quarantine in Alice Springs, during one of his vacations & never rang us for a check-up. His ignoring we exist program is obviously still on-going. It ends on Monday - we had a restructure and he has been removed from all managerial duties. Instead, I gain 2 levels of management (we all do) & the Senior Director, although a career public servant, is likely to be predictable regarding expectations; the immediate manager shall be a challenge - he is currently a team member, who is a brown-noser, so I am wary of a: telling him ideas because he has a habit of claiming them for himself; and b: what crappy chores he will throw at me as he stretches his ego.
The isolation has also meant no escape to recharge from this challenging town. Alice Springs is equal to the worst Baltimore days with rampant crime. The costs have skyrocketed - the return airfare to attend my cousin's funeral equalled a Sydney to Los Angeles fare & instead of 2.5 hrs travel, had exploded to 15-18 hours as I did multiple flights & sat incarcerated in terminals.
I have 2 Zoom groups - my Bendigo Show knitting pals once a week, & my Syrian Orphan charity crew every 14 days. I have knitted & read a lot until just recently with this heatwave. Nothing has been completed of late, but my monthly tally of used up balls is acceptable for both monthly & year to date.
I love Amy's Shawl project. Go You!! My friend. I'm not betting on who gets across 1st - I haven't been successful regarding both US election calls, and new Management position placements.
Lubbs Petey
On Sunday, November 15, 2020, 07:55:14 AM GMT+9:30, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:
Forgot to add: I am cooking a more experimental menu because I need to plan and I can look up recipes and get ingredients.
Also, we had a very successful cookie exchange a few weeks ago when the weather was nice. A bunch of us retired IBMers met outside on my lawn and had a carefully socially distanced gathering. It was lovely to see people.
I am planning to make Elisenlebkuchen in a few weeks when all the ingredients show up. DH and I loved this when we were in Nuremberg and I’ve tried buying lebkuchen here but it isn’t the same. This is a flourless cookie made with hazelnuts and almonds and the stuff you get here is more like fruitcake. It is complicated as the cookies are baked on edible paper bases. If it works, it might become an annual thing.
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On Sat, Nov 14, 2020 at 5:21 PM Jaya < ermabom@...> wrote: Happy Diwali to all of you! Today is the day that Hindus believe light triumphed over darkness, good over evil. May the light dispel your darkness and may you have good triumph over evil in your life. In some parts of India, today is also New Year’s day and I also wish you a very safe, happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year!
My Diwali traditions these days are far removed from what I did when I was growing up. Work, the inability to take the day off in the early days of my career (before personal choice or floating holidays), and the demands of raising kids meant that all I ever did here was make sweets and light lamps.?
We’ve been pretty much home-bound since March. My sister occasionally comes over to see my father if she comes upstate. My father would have gone to visit my brother for some months but that hasn’t happened. He is confined to the house except for doctor’s appointments. We go to the grocery store, to the hardware store, and the pharmacy around once a week and most other things are quite rare.
DD was supposed to come at Thanksgiving with an extra two weeks of working from here when she would be quarantining in our house. In her bedroom with access to the other bathroom upstairs and maybe exercising in the basement when we weren’t there. But we canceled due to spikes in her area and in ours. We’ll reschedule when levels are down and not plan but just do it spontaneously.
However, some things have worked out well - I now have a Sat am Zoom call with Ravefry friends from the US, Canada and India. I taught DD to make Indian sweets yesterday so she can celebrate Diwali on her own. My yard is looking good. I’ve been doing some weaving, knitting, spinning, but not as much as I thought I would.? On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 9:00 PM erica < knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ...
knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
--
Jaya
|
lebkuchen ... thanks Jaya ... that word took me on a *several* hour German food imagineTasting odyssey?...yum!The recipes I was reading about?lebkuchen and its cousins ... all used large Altar Bread as the bottom layer ... you said paper ... just a thought. And never.would.I.ever ... have realized Amazon sells Altar Bread (communion wafers if you ask this lapsed Catholic) ... in multiple sizes! With fancy patterns! It took all my willpower NOT to order a box ... since I have an empty Catholic Church right across the street :-)
THANKS for the European vacay! erica - livin' large in a small sandbox
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On Sat, Nov 14, 2020 at 3:25 PM Jaya Srikrishnan < ermabom@...> wrote: Forgot to add: I am cooking a more experimental menu because I need to plan and I can look up recipes and get ingredients.
Also, we had a very successful cookie exchange a few weeks ago when the weather was nice. A bunch of us retired IBMers met outside on my lawn and had a carefully socially distanced gathering. It was lovely to see people.
I am planning to make Elisenlebkuchen in a few weeks when all the ingredients show up. DH and I loved this when we were in Nuremberg and I’ve tried buying lebkuchen here but it isn’t the same. This is a flourless cookie made with hazelnuts and almonds and the stuff you get here is more like fruitcake. It is complicated as the cookies are baked on edible paper bases. If it works, it might become an annual thing. On Sat, Nov 14, 2020 at 5:21 PM Jaya < ermabom@...> wrote: Happy Diwali to all of you! Today is the day that Hindus believe light triumphed over darkness, good over evil. May the light dispel your darkness and may you have good triumph over evil in your life. In some parts of India, today is also New Year’s day and I also wish you a very safe, happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year!
My Diwali traditions these days are far removed from what I did when I was growing up. Work, the inability to take the day off in the early days of my career (before personal choice or floating holidays), and the demands of raising kids meant that all I ever did here was make sweets and light lamps.?
We’ve been pretty much home-bound since March. My sister occasionally comes over to see my father if she comes upstate. My father would have gone to visit my brother for some months but that hasn’t happened. He is confined to the house except for doctor’s appointments. We go to the grocery store, to the hardware store, and the pharmacy around once a week and most other things are quite rare.
DD was supposed to come at Thanksgiving with an extra two weeks of working from here when she would be quarantining in our house. In her bedroom with access to the other bathroom upstairs and maybe exercising in the basement when we weren’t there. But we canceled due to spikes in her area and in ours. We’ll reschedule when levels are down and not plan but just do it spontaneously.
However, some things have worked out well - I now have a Sat am Zoom call with Ravefry friends from the US, Canada and India. I taught DD to make Indian sweets yesterday so she can celebrate Diwali on her own. My yard is looking good. I’ve been doing some weaving, knitting, spinning, but not as much as I thought I would.? On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 9:00 PM erica < knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ...
knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
--
Jaya
--
Jaya
|
Hi everyone, it was delightful to read so much news of people managing to stay sane and keep going. Fighting something by lying low? is so counter-intuitive. ? We’re okay here. DD2 successfully crossed the border form Scotland late August at the end of her year’s post at the Glasgow veterinary hospital, travel then being allowed, and flew to Geneva as she had not seen her Dad since Christmas last. Had a? good week with him but got caught by the new quarantine requirement for those returning from Switzerland, so spent her last two weeks of vacation quarantining in the opposite side of the house from myself. At that time Swiss cases were much lower than in the UK so it seemed a bit daft, but she was fine and spent a lot of the time in her room going? through drawers and cupboards and removing things no longer wanted. So all good. ? Got back over the border late September, to her anaesthetics post in a new hospital just outside Edinburgh, but now caught again in high level restrictions. No idea when I will see her again. She’s had a tough year, like most of the central belt in Scotland. Hard lockdown, very heavy work schedule, off work 5 weeks with? coronavirus, straight back? into heavy schedule, no travel over 5 miles allowed from March until late July ?- so only 4 weeks of relative freedom before returning home. They have not reinstated the 5 mile strict limit yet but by mid-September no-one is supposed to leave the health area they are in (to prevent high infection rates spreading to relatively “clean” areas!!). The exclamation marks are because lots of people ignored it and drove into the areas which were still open for dining etc, and now these areas also join the high infection restrictions. So thoughtless. ? I got out to Switzerland late September, had a wonderful ten days with DH, we visited Kandersteg and St Moritz which are stunningly beautiful. I then had to do my 2 weeks of quarantine so did a lot of those household jobs which are always on the upcoming” list but never make it to the top. ? In between all that, taking my regular turns for a couple of days with parents in London, piloting them to hospital appointments, sorting out their muddles and trying to keep them going.? With both developing dementia and heart problems, Mum now having some nasty face cancers which she is refusing to have treated, and general limited ability to cope with anything but the most basic, regular tasks, there will be a day of reckoning coming soon. We hope to keep things on an even keel at least until January, maybe even until Easter. But it depends…….. ? So, current state of play. Swiss figures atrocious, worst in Europe and no-one sure how it happened so quickly. DH may not get home at Christmas. DD2 likely to be stuck north of border, Dd1 with husband about 80 miles away, because I am on my own at present and they are shielding for her DH, we have special access arrangements allowed so she can pop over when she feels it is safe to do so. So we have had a few day visits and one stop-over since the rules changed in July. How we hugged and hugged when we first saw each other after 8 months ? But currently all England in? a 4 week lockdown where only education, work which can’t be done from home, exercise, essential shopping and medical visits are allowable reasons for leaving home – all to be done “locally”. We’re lucky to have a nice home and a small garden. And lovely woodlands nearby. ? I’ve done surprisingly little knitting, taken up cross stitch which I have to really concentrate on (so it blocks stuff out). Started some drawing and painting again, thinking about playing with basketry. I’m a real introvert but I am getting tired of the situation. I want my friends and family back. But I have been sure since last January that this would be the state of play until at least? Easter 2021, so we just have to hang on in there, plenty of time for reading anyway. ? Vaccine won’t be a quick fix, with 2 doses 2 weeks apart, a 4 week wait for protection after that, the very first to get vaccinated will have to wait 6 weeks before feeling more safe. And it will take ages for enough people to be done to make much difference to transmission rates. But it will come. If nothing else, the better spring weather will hopefully get us “out of jail” by April and by the end of next summer things should look more normal. Roll on 2022!!!!!! ? Best of luck to everyone meanwhile, in new jobs, relocation plans, in managing to keep connected to those we love. I try to remind myself of the lonely onlies who don’t have anyone to miss seeing, for whom this is their normal everyday life. I do hope that ?out of all this will come more community effort to engage with these people and give them more connection and less enforced solitude. ? Jenny
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From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on Behalf Of Jaya Srikrishnan Sent: 14 November 2020 22:21 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [yarnmongers] Friday the 13th check-in ...? Happy Diwali to all of you! Today is the day that Hindus believe light triumphed over darkness, good over evil. May the light dispel your darkness and may you have good triumph over evil in your life. In some parts of India, today is also New Year’s day and I also wish you a very safe, happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year! My Diwali traditions these days are far removed from what I did when I was growing up. Work, the inability to take the day off in the early days of my career (before personal choice or floating holidays), and the demands of raising kids meant that all I ever did here was make sweets and light lamps.? We’ve been pretty much home-bound since March. My sister occasionally comes over to see my father if she comes upstate. My father would have gone to visit my brother for some months but that hasn’t happened. He is confined to the house except for doctor’s appointments. We go to the grocery store, to the hardware store, and the pharmacy around once a week and most other things are quite rare. DD was supposed to come at Thanksgiving with an extra two weeks of working from here when she would be quarantining in our house. In her bedroom with access to the other bathroom upstairs and maybe exercising in the basement when we weren’t there. But we canceled due to spikes in her area and in ours. We’ll reschedule when levels are down and not plan but just do it spontaneously. However, some things have worked out well - I now have a Sat am Zoom call with Ravefry friends from the US, Canada and India. I taught DD to make Indian sweets yesterday so she can celebrate Diwali on her own. My yard is looking good. I’ve been doing some weaving, knitting, spinning, but not as much as I thought I would.? ? On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 9:00 PM erica <knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ... knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
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We love Elisenlebkuchen. Let us know how it goes….. Jenny ?
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From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Jaya Srikrishnan Sent: 14 November 2020 22:25 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [yarnmongers] Friday the 13th check-in ...? Forgot to add: I am cooking a more experimental menu because I need to plan and I can look up recipes and get ingredients. Also, we had a very successful cookie exchange a few weeks ago when the weather was nice. A bunch of us retired IBMers met outside on my lawn and had a carefully socially distanced gathering. It was lovely to see people. I am planning to make Elisenlebkuchen in a few weeks when all the ingredients show up. DH and I loved this when we were in Nuremberg and I’ve tried buying lebkuchen here but it isn’t the same. This is a flourless cookie made with hazelnuts and almonds and the stuff you get here is more like fruitcake. It is complicated as the cookies are baked on edible paper bases. If it works, it might become an annual thing. ? On Sat, Nov 14, 2020 at 5:21 PM Jaya <ermabom@...> wrote: Happy Diwali to all of you! Today is the day that Hindus believe light triumphed over darkness, good over evil. May the light dispel your darkness and may you have good triumph over evil in your life. In some parts of India, today is also New Year’s day and I also wish you a very safe, happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year! My Diwali traditions these days are far removed from what I did when I was growing up. Work, the inability to take the day off in the early days of my career (before personal choice or floating holidays), and the demands of raising kids meant that all I ever did here was make sweets and light lamps.? We’ve been pretty much home-bound since March. My sister occasionally comes over to see my father if she comes upstate. My father would have gone to visit my brother for some months but that hasn’t happened. He is confined to the house except for doctor’s appointments. We go to the grocery store, to the hardware store, and the pharmacy around once a week and most other things are quite rare. DD was supposed to come at Thanksgiving with an extra two weeks of working from here when she would be quarantining in our house. In her bedroom with access to the other bathroom upstairs and maybe exercising in the basement when we weren’t there. But we canceled due to spikes in her area and in ours. We’ll reschedule when levels are down and not plan but just do it spontaneously. However, some things have worked out well - I now have a Sat am Zoom call with Ravefry friends from the US, Canada and India. I taught DD to make Indian sweets yesterday so she can celebrate Diwali on her own. My yard is looking good. I’ve been doing some weaving, knitting, spinning, but not as much as I thought I would.? ? On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 9:00 PM erica <knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ... knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
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Erica,? Elisenlebkuchen use these. We didn't realize they were edible so peeled them off the ones we bought in Nuremberg. There are many, many lebkuchen recipes. I bought a German baking cookbook to get the recipe for the Elisenlebkuchen and it has a few different?ones in it. I may make some of the others at some point.
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On Sat, Nov 14, 2020 at 10:35 PM erica < knitzz@...> wrote: lebkuchen ... thanks Jaya ... that word took me on a *several* hour German food imagineTasting odyssey?...yum!The recipes I was reading about?lebkuchen and its cousins ... all used large Altar Bread as the bottom layer ... you said paper ... just a thought. And never.would.I.ever ... have realized Amazon sells Altar Bread (communion wafers if you ask this lapsed Catholic) ... in multiple sizes! With fancy patterns! It took all my willpower NOT to order a box ... since I have an empty Catholic Church right across the street :-)
THANKS for the European vacay! erica - livin' large in a small sandbox
On Sat, Nov 14, 2020 at 3:25 PM Jaya Srikrishnan < ermabom@...> wrote: Forgot to add: I am cooking a more experimental menu because I need to plan and I can look up recipes and get ingredients.
Also, we had a very successful cookie exchange a few weeks ago when the weather was nice. A bunch of us retired IBMers met outside on my lawn and had a carefully socially distanced gathering. It was lovely to see people.
I am planning to make Elisenlebkuchen in a few weeks when all the ingredients show up. DH and I loved this when we were in Nuremberg and I’ve tried buying lebkuchen here but it isn’t the same. This is a flourless cookie made with hazelnuts and almonds and the stuff you get here is more like fruitcake. It is complicated as the cookies are baked on edible paper bases. If it works, it might become an annual thing. On Sat, Nov 14, 2020 at 5:21 PM Jaya < ermabom@...> wrote: Happy Diwali to all of you! Today is the day that Hindus believe light triumphed over darkness, good over evil. May the light dispel your darkness and may you have good triumph over evil in your life. In some parts of India, today is also New Year’s day and I also wish you a very safe, happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year!
My Diwali traditions these days are far removed from what I did when I was growing up. Work, the inability to take the day off in the early days of my career (before personal choice or floating holidays), and the demands of raising kids meant that all I ever did here was make sweets and light lamps.?
We’ve been pretty much home-bound since March. My sister occasionally comes over to see my father if she comes upstate. My father would have gone to visit my brother for some months but that hasn’t happened. He is confined to the house except for doctor’s appointments. We go to the grocery store, to the hardware store, and the pharmacy around once a week and most other things are quite rare.
DD was supposed to come at Thanksgiving with an extra two weeks of working from here when she would be quarantining in our house. In her bedroom with access to the other bathroom upstairs and maybe exercising in the basement when we weren’t there. But we canceled due to spikes in her area and in ours. We’ll reschedule when levels are down and not plan but just do it spontaneously.
However, some things have worked out well - I now have a Sat am Zoom call with Ravefry friends from the US, Canada and India. I taught DD to make Indian sweets yesterday so she can celebrate Diwali on her own. My yard is looking good. I’ve been doing some weaving, knitting, spinning, but not as much as I thought I would.? On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 9:00 PM erica < knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ...
knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
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Jaya
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Jaya
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Jenny, You said " taken up cross stitch which I have to really concentrate on (so it blocks stuff out)."
That is exactly how I use my Swedish Heartwarmer shawl. It takes a lot of concentration because of a) stranding, b) Philosopher's Wool Method and c) knitting backwards two-handed. Some charts are easy and I can listen to podcasts or listen to TV when I'm doing them. Others require silence and total concentration.?
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On Sun, Nov 15, 2020 at 12:45 AM Jenny Swanson < jenny@...> wrote: Hi everyone, it was delightful to read so much news of people managing to stay sane and keep going. Fighting something by lying low? is so counter-intuitive. ? We’re okay here. DD2 successfully crossed the border form Scotland late August at the end of her year’s post at the Glasgow veterinary hospital, travel then being allowed, and flew to Geneva as she had not seen her Dad since Christmas last. Had a? good week with him but got caught by the new quarantine requirement for those returning from Switzerland, so spent her last two weeks of vacation quarantining in the opposite side of the house from myself. At that time Swiss cases were much lower than in the UK so it seemed a bit daft, but she was fine and spent a lot of the time in her room going? through drawers and cupboards and removing things no longer wanted. So all good. ? Got back over the border late September, to her anaesthetics post in a new hospital just outside Edinburgh, but now caught again in high level restrictions. No idea when I will see her again. She’s had a tough year, like most of the central belt in Scotland. Hard lockdown, very heavy work schedule, off work 5 weeks with? coronavirus, straight back? into heavy schedule, no travel over 5 miles allowed from March until late July ?- so only 4 weeks of relative freedom before returning home. They have not reinstated the 5 mile strict limit yet but by mid-September no-one is supposed to leave the health area they are in (to prevent high infection rates spreading to relatively “clean” areas!!). The exclamation marks are because lots of people ignored it and drove into the areas which were still open for dining etc, and now these areas also join the high infection restrictions. So thoughtless. ? I got out to Switzerland late September, had a wonderful ten days with DH, we visited Kandersteg and St Moritz which are stunningly beautiful. I then had to do my 2 weeks of quarantine so did a lot of those household jobs which are always on the upcoming” list but never make it to the top. ? In between all that, taking my regular turns for a couple of days with parents in London, piloting them to hospital appointments, sorting out their muddles and trying to keep them going.? With both developing dementia and heart problems, Mum now having some nasty face cancers which she is refusing to have treated, and general limited ability to cope with anything but the most basic, regular tasks, there will be a day of reckoning coming soon. We hope to keep things on an even keel at least until January, maybe even until Easter. But it depends…….. ? So, current state of play. Swiss figures atrocious, worst in Europe and no-one sure how it happened so quickly. DH may not get home at Christmas. DD2 likely to be stuck north of border, Dd1 with husband about 80 miles away, because I am on my own at present and they are shielding for her DH, we have special access arrangements allowed so she can pop over when she feels it is safe to do so. So we have had a few day visits and one stop-over since the rules changed in July. How we hugged and hugged when we first saw each other after 8 months ? But currently all England in? a 4 week lockdown where only education, work which can’t be done from home, exercise, essential shopping and medical visits are allowable reasons for leaving home – all to be done “locally”. We’re lucky to have a nice home and a small garden. And lovely woodlands nearby. ? I’ve done surprisingly little knitting, taken up cross stitch which I have to really concentrate on (so it blocks stuff out). Started some drawing and painting again, thinking about playing with basketry. I’m a real introvert but I am getting tired of the situation. I want my friends and family back. But I have been sure since last January that this would be the state of play until at least? Easter 2021, so we just have to hang on in there, plenty of time for reading anyway. ? Vaccine won’t be a quick fix, with 2 doses 2 weeks apart, a 4 week wait for protection after that, the very first to get vaccinated will have to wait 6 weeks before feeling more safe. And it will take ages for enough people to be done to make much difference to transmission rates. But it will come. If nothing else, the better spring weather will hopefully get us “out of jail” by April and by the end of next summer things should look more normal. Roll on 2022!!!!!! ? Best of luck to everyone meanwhile, in new jobs, relocation plans, in managing to keep connected to those we love. I try to remind myself of the lonely onlies who don’t have anyone to miss seeing, for whom this is their normal everyday life. I do hope that ?out of all this will come more community effort to engage with these people and give them more connection and less enforced solitude. ? Jenny ? Happy Diwali to all of you! Today is the day that Hindus believe light triumphed over darkness, good over evil. May the light dispel your darkness and may you have good triumph over evil in your life. In some parts of India, today is also New Year’s day and I also wish you a very safe, happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year! My Diwali traditions these days are far removed from what I did when I was growing up. Work, the inability to take the day off in the early days of my career (before personal choice or floating holidays), and the demands of raising kids meant that all I ever did here was make sweets and light lamps.? We’ve been pretty much home-bound since March. My sister occasionally comes over to see my father if she comes upstate. My father would have gone to visit my brother for some months but that hasn’t happened. He is confined to the house except for doctor’s appointments. We go to the grocery store, to the hardware store, and the pharmacy around once a week and most other things are quite rare. DD was supposed to come at Thanksgiving with an extra two weeks of working from here when she would be quarantining in our house. In her bedroom with access to the other bathroom upstairs and maybe exercising in the basement when we weren’t there. But we canceled due to spikes in her area and in ours. We’ll reschedule when levels are down and not plan but just do it spontaneously. However, some things have worked out well - I now have a Sat am Zoom call with Ravefry friends from the US, Canada and India. I taught DD to make Indian sweets yesterday so she can celebrate Diwali on her own. My yard is looking good. I’ve been doing some weaving, knitting, spinning, but not as much as I thought I would.? ? On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 9:00 PM erica <knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ... knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
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The universe is an interesting place; just now I got an email from Food52 that included this link to a recipe for elisenlebkuchen.
Patricia in Austin
On Sunday, November 15, 2020, 8:55:38 AM CST, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote:
Jenny, You said " taken up cross stitch which I have to really concentrate on (so it blocks stuff out)."
That is exactly how I use my Swedish Heartwarmer shawl. It takes a lot of concentration because of a) stranding, b) Philosopher's Wool Method and c) knitting backwards two-handed. Some charts are easy and I can listen to podcasts or listen to TV when I'm doing them. Others require silence and total concentration.?
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On Sun, Nov 15, 2020 at 12:45 AM Jenny Swanson < jenny@...> wrote: Hi everyone, it was delightful to read so much news of people managing to stay sane and keep going. Fighting something by lying low? is so counter-intuitive. ? We’re okay here. DD2 successfully crossed the border form Scotland late August at the end of her year’s post at the Glasgow veterinary hospital, travel then being allowed, and flew to Geneva as she had not seen her Dad since Christmas last. Had a? good week with him but got caught by the new quarantine requirement for those returning from Switzerland, so spent her last two weeks of vacation quarantining in the opposite side of the house from myself. At that time Swiss cases were much lower than in the UK so it seemed a bit daft, but she was fine and spent a lot of the time in her room going? through drawers and cupboards and removing things no longer wanted. So all good. ? Got back over the border late September, to her anaesthetics post in a new hospital just outside Edinburgh, but now caught again in high level restrictions. No idea when I will see her again. She’s had a tough year, like most of the central belt in Scotland. Hard lockdown, very heavy work schedule, off work 5 weeks with? coronavirus, straight back? into heavy schedule, no travel over 5 miles allowed from March until late July ?- so only 4 weeks of relative freedom before returning home. They have not reinstated the 5 mile strict limit yet but by mid-September no-one is supposed to leave the health area they are in (to prevent high infection rates spreading to relatively “clean” areas!!). The exclamation marks are because lots of people ignored it and drove into the areas which were still open for dining etc, and now these areas also join the high infection restrictions. So thoughtless. ? I got out to Switzerland late September, had a wonderful ten days with DH, we visited Kandersteg and St Moritz which are stunningly beautiful. I then had to do my 2 weeks of quarantine so did a lot of those household jobs which are always on the upcoming” list but never make it to the top. ? In between all that, taking my regular turns for a couple of days with parents in London, piloting them to hospital appointments, sorting out their muddles and trying to keep them going.? With both developing dementia and heart problems, Mum now having some nasty face cancers which she is refusing to have treated, and general limited ability to cope with anything but the most basic, regular tasks, there will be a day of reckoning coming soon. We hope to keep things on an even keel at least until January, maybe even until Easter. But it depends…….. ? So, current state of play. Swiss figures atrocious, worst in Europe and no-one sure how it happened so quickly. DH may not get home at Christmas. DD2 likely to be stuck north of border, Dd1 with husband about 80 miles away, because I am on my own at present and they are shielding for her DH, we have special access arrangements allowed so she can pop over when she feels it is safe to do so. So we have had a few day visits and one stop-over since the rules changed in July. How we hugged and hugged when we first saw each other after 8 months ? But currently all England in? a 4 week lockdown where only education, work which can’t be done from home, exercise, essential shopping and medical visits are allowable reasons for leaving home – all to be done “locally”. We’re lucky to have a nice home and a small garden. And lovely woodlands nearby. ? I’ve done surprisingly little knitting, taken up cross stitch which I have to really concentrate on (so it blocks stuff out). Started some drawing and painting again, thinking about playing with basketry. I’m a real introvert but I am getting tired of the situation. I want my friends and family back. But I have been sure since last January that this would be the state of play until at least? Easter 2021, so we just have to hang on in there, plenty of time for reading anyway. ? Vaccine won’t be a quick fix, with 2 doses 2 weeks apart, a 4 week wait for protection after that, the very first to get vaccinated will have to wait 6 weeks before feeling more safe. And it will take ages for enough people to be done to make much difference to transmission rates. But it will come. If nothing else, the better spring weather will hopefully get us “out of jail” by April and by the end of next summer things should look more normal. Roll on 2022!!!!!! ? Best of luck to everyone meanwhile, in new jobs, relocation plans, in managing to keep connected to those we love. I try to remind myself of the lonely onlies who don’t have anyone to miss seeing, for whom this is their normal everyday life. I do hope that ?out of all this will come more community effort to engage with these people and give them more connection and less enforced solitude. ? Jenny ? Happy Diwali to all of you! Today is the day that Hindus believe light triumphed over darkness, good over evil. May the light dispel your darkness and may you have good triumph over evil in your life. In some parts of India, today is also New Year’s day and I also wish you a very safe, happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year! My Diwali traditions these days are far removed from what I did when I was growing up. Work, the inability to take the day off in the early days of my career (before personal choice or floating holidays), and the demands of raising kids meant that all I ever did here was make sweets and light lamps.? We’ve been pretty much home-bound since March. My sister occasionally comes over to see my father if she comes upstate. My father would have gone to visit my brother for some months but that hasn’t happened. He is confined to the house except for doctor’s appointments. We go to the grocery store, to the hardware store, and the pharmacy around once a week and most other things are quite rare. DD was supposed to come at Thanksgiving with an extra two weeks of working from here when she would be quarantining in our house. In her bedroom with access to the other bathroom upstairs and maybe exercising in the basement when we weren’t there. But we canceled due to spikes in her area and in ours. We’ll reschedule when levels are down and not plan but just do it spontaneously. However, some things have worked out well - I now have a Sat am Zoom call with Ravefry friends from the US, Canada and India. I taught DD to make Indian sweets yesterday so she can celebrate Diwali on her own. My yard is looking good. I’ve been doing some weaving, knitting, spinning, but not as much as I thought I would.? ? On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 9:00 PM erica <knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ... knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
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That recipe is from the book I have ツ Classic German Baking by Luisa Weiss.?
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
The universe is an interesting place; just now I got an email from Food52 that included this link to a recipe for elisenlebkuchen.
Patricia in Austin
On Sunday, November 15, 2020, 8:55:38 AM CST, Jaya Srikrishnan < ermabom@...> wrote:
Jenny, You said " taken up cross stitch which I have to really concentrate on (so it blocks stuff out)."
That is exactly how I use my Swedish Heartwarmer shawl. It takes a lot of concentration because of a) stranding, b) Philosopher's Wool Method and c) knitting backwards two-handed. Some charts are easy and I can listen to podcasts or listen to TV when I'm doing them. Others require silence and total concentration.? On Sun, Nov 15, 2020 at 12:45 AM Jenny Swanson < jenny@...> wrote: Hi everyone, it was delightful to read so much news of people managing to stay sane and keep going. Fighting something by lying low? is so counter-intuitive. ? We’re okay here. DD2 successfully crossed the border form Scotland late August at the end of her year’s post at the Glasgow veterinary hospital, travel then being allowed, and flew to Geneva as she had not seen her Dad since Christmas last. Had a? good week with him but got caught by the new quarantine requirement for those returning from Switzerland, so spent her last two weeks of vacation quarantining in the opposite side of the house from myself. At that time Swiss cases were much lower than in the UK so it seemed a bit daft, but she was fine and spent a lot of the time in her room going? through drawers and cupboards and removing things no longer wanted. So all good. ? Got back over the border late September, to her anaesthetics post in a new hospital just outside Edinburgh, but now caught again in high level restrictions. No idea when I will see her again. She’s had a tough year, like most of the central belt in Scotland. Hard lockdown, very heavy work schedule, off work 5 weeks with? coronavirus, straight back? into heavy schedule, no travel over 5 miles allowed from March until late July ?- so only 4 weeks of relative freedom before returning home. They have not reinstated the 5 mile strict limit yet but by mid-September no-one is supposed to leave the health area they are in (to prevent high infection rates spreading to relatively “clean” areas!!). The exclamation marks are because lots of people ignored it and drove into the areas which were still open for dining etc, and now these areas also join the high infection restrictions. So thoughtless. ? I got out to Switzerland late September, had a wonderful ten days with DH, we visited Kandersteg and St Moritz which are stunningly beautiful. I then had to do my 2 weeks of quarantine so did a lot of those household jobs which are always on the upcoming” list but never make it to the top. ? In between all that, taking my regular turns for a couple of days with parents in London, piloting them to hospital appointments, sorting out their muddles and trying to keep them going.? With both developing dementia and heart problems, Mum now having some nasty face cancers which she is refusing to have treated, and general limited ability to cope with anything but the most basic, regular tasks, there will be a day of reckoning coming soon. We hope to keep things on an even keel at least until January, maybe even until Easter. But it depends…….. ? So, current state of play. Swiss figures atrocious, worst in Europe and no-one sure how it happened so quickly. DH may not get home at Christmas. DD2 likely to be stuck north of border, Dd1 with husband about 80 miles away, because I am on my own at present and they are shielding for her DH, we have special access arrangements allowed so she can pop over when she feels it is safe to do so. So we have had a few day visits and one stop-over since the rules changed in July. How we hugged and hugged when we first saw each other after 8 months ? But currently all England in? a 4 week lockdown where only education, work which can’t be done from home, exercise, essential shopping and medical visits are allowable reasons for leaving home – all to be done “locally”. We’re lucky to have a nice home and a small garden. And lovely woodlands nearby. ? I’ve done surprisingly little knitting, taken up cross stitch which I have to really concentrate on (so it blocks stuff out). Started some drawing and painting again, thinking about playing with basketry. I’m a real introvert but I am getting tired of the situation. I want my friends and family back. But I have been sure since last January that this would be the state of play until at least? Easter 2021, so we just have to hang on in there, plenty of time for reading anyway. ? Vaccine won’t be a quick fix, with 2 doses 2 weeks apart, a 4 week wait for protection after that, the very first to get vaccinated will have to wait 6 weeks before feeling more safe. And it will take ages for enough people to be done to make much difference to transmission rates. But it will come. If nothing else, the better spring weather will hopefully get us “out of jail” by April and by the end of next summer things should look more normal. Roll on 2022!!!!!! ? Best of luck to everyone meanwhile, in new jobs, relocation plans, in managing to keep connected to those we love. I try to remind myself of the lonely onlies who don’t have anyone to miss seeing, for whom this is their normal everyday life. I do hope that ?out of all this will come more community effort to engage with these people and give them more connection and less enforced solitude. ? Jenny ? Happy Diwali to all of you! Today is the day that Hindus believe light triumphed over darkness, good over evil. May the light dispel your darkness and may you have good triumph over evil in your life. In some parts of India, today is also New Year’s day and I also wish you a very safe, happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year! My Diwali traditions these days are far removed from what I did when I was growing up. Work, the inability to take the day off in the early days of my career (before personal choice or floating holidays), and the demands of raising kids meant that all I ever did here was make sweets and light lamps.? We’ve been pretty much home-bound since March. My sister occasionally comes over to see my father if she comes upstate. My father would have gone to visit my brother for some months but that hasn’t happened. He is confined to the house except for doctor’s appointments. We go to the grocery store, to the hardware store, and the pharmacy around once a week and most other things are quite rare. DD was supposed to come at Thanksgiving with an extra two weeks of working from here when she would be quarantining in our house. In her bedroom with access to the other bathroom upstairs and maybe exercising in the basement when we weren’t there. But we canceled due to spikes in her area and in ours. We’ll reschedule when levels are down and not plan but just do it spontaneously. However, some things have worked out well - I now have a Sat am Zoom call with Ravefry friends from the US, Canada and India. I taught DD to make Indian sweets yesterday so she can celebrate Diwali on her own. My yard is looking good. I’ve been doing some weaving, knitting, spinning, but not as much as I thought I would.? ? On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 9:00 PM erica <knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ... knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
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-- Jaya
|
I almost feel bad checking in after reading how awful things are for all of you.
We are living an almost normal life, there’s been no Covid-19 cases in my little part of Australia for months. We have to sign in at coffee shops & restaurants & try not to get too close to people around town but otherwise nothing much is different apart from reading about the rest of the world & worrying.
I’m not complacent though, I know how quickly things could change.?
Son & family live in Manhattan and are still working & schooling from home & being very careful when out. They are preparing for what they think will be another lockdown.
Work has begun on building daughter’s new house, will be months until it’s ready.
Please all of you take care
Beryl
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Checking in from Boston. ?
Work is work. ?
I'm primarily in the outpatient?setting (and will be 100% come January), but that means we are trying to figure out how to see kids w coughs and fevers in a way that is safe for out other patients, and the other practices in the building. The hospital is much more structured.? The office feels?a lot like the Wild West.?
Parker is in the process of moving to NYC (Manhattan rents are **super** cheap ?just now), and hopefully will find a job relatively?soon.? It is very exciting, but nerve-wracking too, as he will be outside of where I can rescue him.? He has been staying w me since late October, but going down to NYC to tour apartments. ? After one back and forth, Scott and I decided to just put him up at an AirBnB for 10 days so he would just be there, apartment hunting.? He has an application in on a great lofted studio in Chelsea for the same rent I paid for him in Waltham.? Hopefully they will accept it and he will have a new home.? Then he'll be back (testing first, of course) to pack everything and move down.? The back and forth is hard to be comfortable with... and then he's there until the numbers get better....? I am totally isolated from my pod until he has been gone for 2 weeks, so it will be a lonely stretch in December.
Such an anxious time for everyone...
Laura
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I almost feel bad checking in after reading how awful things are for all of you.
We are living an almost normal life, there’s been no Covid-19 cases in my little part of Australia for months. We have to sign in at coffee shops & restaurants & try not to get too close to people around town but otherwise nothing much is different apart from reading about the rest of the world & worrying.
I’m not complacent though, I know how quickly things could change.?
Son & family live in Manhattan and are still working & schooling from home & being very careful when out. They are preparing for what they think will be another lockdown.
Work has begun on building daughter’s new house, will be months until it’s ready.
Please all of you take care
Beryl
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Checking in from Wyoming.? We're pretty much isolated on the
ranch or at the town house, but not much has changed from our
usual life. We've stayed healthy.? Virus cases have increased out
here so everyone is on guard - social distancing, wearing masks,
etc.? We keep contact with our family via email and Whats App on
our phones. Some of our kids will probably be with us for
Thanksgiving.? Our son is working for Google in Texas and will be
home for a few days after Thanksgiving.? I've been knitting?
(blanket, socks, sweater) and reading.? I'd like to get back to
doing some spinning and weaving, but just can't seem to get up the
energy to do that.? Funny how this sitting around saps ones
energy.? My chemo is going well, blood work stays normal.? I just
get treatment once a month.
Good to hear from all of you and wish you all well!
Ann in WY
On 11/15/2020 5:30 PM, Laura Need
wrote:
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Checking in from Boston. ?
Work is work. ?
I'm primarily in the outpatient?setting (and will be 100%
come January), but that means we are trying to figure out how
to see kids w coughs and fevers in a way that is safe for out
other patients, and the other practices in the building. The
hospital is much more structured.? The office feels?a lot like
the Wild West.?
Parker is in the process of moving to NYC (Manhattan rents
are **super** cheap ?just now), and hopefully will find a job
relatively?soon.? It is very exciting, but nerve-wracking too,
as he will be outside of where I can rescue him.? He has been
staying w me since late October, but going down to NYC to tour
apartments. ? After one back and forth, Scott and I decided to
just put him up at an AirBnB for 10 days so he would just be
there, apartment hunting.? He has an application in on a great
lofted studio in Chelsea for the same rent I paid for him in
Waltham.? Hopefully they will accept it and he will have a new
home.? Then he'll be back (testing first, of course) to pack
everything and move down.? The back and forth is hard to be
comfortable with... and then he's there until the numbers get
better....? I am totally isolated from my pod until he has
been gone for 2 weeks, so it will be a lonely stretch in
December.
Such an anxious time for everyone...
Laura
I almost feel bad checking in after reading how awful
things are for all of you.
We are living an almost normal life, there’s been no
Covid-19 cases in my little part of Australia for months.
We have to sign in at coffee shops & restaurants &
try not to get too close to people around town but otherwise
nothing much is different apart from reading about the rest
of the world & worrying.
I’m not complacent though, I know how quickly things could
change.?
Son & family live in Manhattan and are still working
& schooling from home & being very careful when out.
They are preparing for what they think will be another
lockdown.
Work has begun on building daughter’s new house, will be
months until it’s ready.
Please all of you take care
Beryl
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So we’re ahead of the trend? ? Jenny ?
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From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Texknitter via groups.io Sent: 15 November 2020 22:07 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [yarnmongers] Friday the 13th check-in ...? The universe is an interesting place; just now I got an email from Food52 that included this link to a recipe for elisenlebkuchen. ?
| | The Finest and Richest of All German LebkuchenA batchable, better-as-it-sits Christmas cookie |
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On Sunday, November 15, 2020, 8:55:38 AM CST, Jaya Srikrishnan <ermabom@...> wrote: You said " taken up cross stitch which I have to really concentrate on (so it blocks stuff out)." That is exactly how I use my Swedish Heartwarmer shawl. It takes a lot of concentration because of a) stranding, b) Philosopher's Wool Method and c) knitting backwards two-handed. Some charts are easy and I can listen to podcasts or listen to TV when I'm doing them. Others require silence and total concentration.? ? On Sun, Nov 15, 2020 at 12:45 AM Jenny Swanson <jenny@...> wrote: Hi everyone, it was delightful to read so much news of people managing to stay sane and keep going. Fighting something by lying low? is so counter-intuitive. ? We’re okay here. DD2 successfully crossed the border form Scotland late August at the end of her year’s post at the Glasgow veterinary hospital, travel then being allowed, and flew to Geneva as she had not seen her Dad since Christmas last. Had a? good week with him but got caught by the new quarantine requirement for those returning from Switzerland, so spent her last two weeks of vacation quarantining in the opposite side of the house from myself. At that time Swiss cases were much lower than in the UK so it seemed a bit daft, but she was fine and spent a lot of the time in her room going? through drawers and cupboards and removing things no longer wanted. So all good. ? Got back over the border late September, to her anaesthetics post in a new hospital just outside Edinburgh, but now caught again in high level restrictions. No idea when I will see her again. She’s had a tough year, like most of the central belt in Scotland. Hard lockdown, very heavy work schedule, off work 5 weeks with? coronavirus, straight back? into heavy schedule, no travel over 5 miles allowed from March until late July ?- so only 4 weeks of relative freedom before returning home. They have not reinstated the 5 mile strict limit yet but by mid-September no-one is supposed to leave the health area they are in (to prevent high infection rates spreading to relatively “clean” areas!!). The exclamation marks are because lots of people ignored it and drove into the areas which were still open for dining etc, and now these areas also join the high infection restrictions. So thoughtless. ? I got out to Switzerland late September, had a wonderful ten days with DH, we visited Kandersteg and St Moritz which are stunningly beautiful. I then had to do my 2 weeks of quarantine so did a lot of those household jobs which are always on the upcoming” list but never make it to the top. ? In between all that, taking my regular turns for a couple of days with parents in London, piloting them to hospital appointments, sorting out their muddles and trying to keep them going.? With both developing dementia and heart problems, Mum now having some nasty face cancers which she is refusing to have treated, and general limited ability to cope with anything but the most basic, regular tasks, there will be a day of reckoning coming soon. We hope to keep things on an even keel at least until January, maybe even until Easter. But it depends…….. ? So, current state of play. Swiss figures atrocious, worst in Europe and no-one sure how it happened so quickly. DH may not get home at Christmas. DD2 likely to be stuck north of border, Dd1 with husband about 80 miles away, because I am on my own at present and they are shielding for her DH, we have special access arrangements allowed so she can pop over when she feels it is safe to do so. So we have had a few day visits and one stop-over since the rules changed in July. How we hugged and hugged when we first saw each other after 8 months ? But currently all England in? a 4 week lockdown where only education, work which can’t be done from home, exercise, essential shopping and medical visits are allowable reasons for leaving home – all to be done “locally”. We’re lucky to have a nice home and a small garden. And lovely woodlands nearby. ? I’ve done surprisingly little knitting, taken up cross stitch which I have to really concentrate on (so it blocks stuff out). Started some drawing and painting again, thinking about playing with basketry. I’m a real introvert but I am getting tired of the situation. I want my friends and family back. But I have been sure since last January that this would be the state of play until at least? Easter 2021, so we just have to hang on in there, plenty of time for reading anyway. ? Vaccine won’t be a quick fix, with 2 doses 2 weeks apart, a 4 week wait for protection after that, the very first to get vaccinated will have to wait 6 weeks before feeling more safe. And it will take ages for enough people to be done to make much difference to transmission rates. But it will come. If nothing else, the better spring weather will hopefully get us “out of jail” by April and by the end of next summer things should look more normal. Roll on 2022!!!!!! ? Best of luck to everyone meanwhile, in new jobs, relocation plans, in managing to keep connected to those we love. I try to remind myself of the lonely onlies who don’t have anyone to miss seeing, for whom this is their normal everyday life. I do hope that ?out of all this will come more community effort to engage with these people and give them more connection and less enforced solitude. ? Jenny ? Happy Diwali to all of you! Today is the day that Hindus believe light triumphed over darkness, good over evil. May the light dispel your darkness and may you have good triumph over evil in your life. In some parts of India, today is also New Year’s day and I also wish you a very safe, happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year! My Diwali traditions these days are far removed from what I did when I was growing up. Work, the inability to take the day off in the early days of my career (before personal choice or floating holidays), and the demands of raising kids meant that all I ever did here was make sweets and light lamps.? We’ve been pretty much home-bound since March. My sister occasionally comes over to see my father if she comes upstate. My father would have gone to visit my brother for some months but that hasn’t happened. He is confined to the house except for doctor’s appointments. We go to the grocery store, to the hardware store, and the pharmacy around once a week and most other things are quite rare. DD was supposed to come at Thanksgiving with an extra two weeks of working from here when she would be quarantining in our house. In her bedroom with access to the other bathroom upstairs and maybe exercising in the basement when we weren’t there. But we canceled due to spikes in her area and in ours. We’ll reschedule when levels are down and not plan but just do it spontaneously. However, some things have worked out well - I now have a Sat am Zoom call with Ravefry friends from the US, Canada and India. I taught DD to make Indian sweets yesterday so she can celebrate Diwali on her own. My yard is looking good. I’ve been doing some weaving, knitting, spinning, but not as much as I thought I would.? ? On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 9:00 PM erica <knitzz@...> wrote: I feel like I have been asleep ... on a bus ... and when I woke up ... y'all musta got off a few stops ago :-)
Can you tell I just finished listening to an interview with Mary Karr ... love her word*crafting ... knock*knock ... anybody out there? erica in sunny <blue> arizona
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