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About Robin

Owner of Meridian Jacobs, farm and fiber shop. I raise Jacob sheep, teach fiber arts classes, weave handwovens for sale, and manage the store.

A Family Affair

In the last post I showed photos of dyeing and weaving chenille scarves for a show at The Artery in Davis. This post is about that show. IMG_8115For this month’s show we invited our family members to join us in sharing their art work.IMG_8111My sons and daughter-in-law entered their photos. Sorry that my photos don’t show theirs very well. Chris took photos while on the fire line last summer. Matt and Kaleena’s photos are taken in their “backyard” of the El Dorado National Forest. I wove 7 Fire scarves and 5 Sky scarves so that I could choose the ones I wanted to display with the photos. You can’t tell from this but the Fire scarves have sparkles (and have a lot more color variation than shows up here).IMG_8112I also included two of my mom’s pieces. She was always proud of her teapots because she could create a dripless spout. IMG_8113Mom mostly made functional pieces like plates, bowls, and mugs, but also made tiles for the kitchen, a bathroom sink (the actual sink !), lanterns, birdbaths, and a sundial. This is a rare statement on society…IMG_8114…but I’m not really sure what she meant.IMG_8121I took only a few more photos in the gallery because I ran out of time. Artery member Marjan made the 3-D flowers and her mom did the silk paintings.IMG_8120Heidi’s husband and dad collaborated with her making bowls.IMG_8123Sorry, but I don’t remember whose work this is but it is all felt, including the rocks.IMG_8117Here is a wild “Dragon Drawn in Space” above member Chris’ family’s art.IMG_8105My regular work moved out of the gallery and is in the front of the Artery for the next month or two.

A Family Affair will be in the gallery through February 1. I hope that those of you who are local can make it there.

Fire & Sky in Chenille

The Artery is having a show called A Family Affair. We invited members’ family to include artwork in the January show and I invited my sons and DIL. They entered photos and I planned to weave chenille scarves to accompany the photos.

The vibrancy of the photos inspired my idea for the scarf colors. I didn’t want to just choose yarns off the shelf. For one thing I didn’t have the right colors, but the main problem was that I didn’t want stripes. I wanted to have colors that flowed in to one another over the length of the scarf. That means starting with white (usually) yarn and dyeing it.

Oops! Not enough white or off-white chenille yarn on the shelf. I had enough of that for two warps of two scarves each. That would be one warp for Chris’ fire photos and one for Matt and Kaleena’s mountain photos. I wanted more than that so that some could be “practice” warps. More about that later.

I also assumed that I had dye in the colors that I wanted because…well just because…just like I assumed that I had white chenille in the shop. I got the box out of the garage and pulled out all the containers that had yellow or orange or red (fire scarves) and blue or (mountain scarves) in their names. IMG_8048I was OK for Fire. I had wound the two white/off-white warps but wanted to start with something else to try out the colors.IMG_8051I still have some warps leftover from my Yarn from the Box project in colors that won’t sell. I used these yarns with the plan that I would eventually dye the warp. IMG_8055Now was the time. I started with yellow but it didn’t cover the colors very well so this warp went to oranges and reds.IMG_8058That was the “practice” warp. Now it was time for the “real” one and I decided to use just these colors.IMG_8056You can see the yarns that I used weren’t all the same because I didn’t have enough of any one shade. Here is where my photo documentary of the process has holes. This was a cold, damp day. I was bundled up in overalls and Carhart jacket and wool layers. I had footwarmers in my boots   but I had to keep switching from warm gloves to rubber gloves, neither of which lent themselves to taking lots of photos. And it was getting late in the day and I was starting to lose the light. So no more photos of these warps after dyeing. IMG_8060I wasn’t satisfied with the dye job on the white warp so I wound another but this time used yellow yarns because I didn’t have anymore white. I dyed this in those same colors.IMG_2895_mediumDona was at the shop the day I was trying to get these warps to dry. She took this photo of them hanging near the heater. IMG_8062Back to the dye day. These were the blues. It was getting late so not many more photos.IMG_8064Here is one of the Mountain Sky warps. 948-951 chenille scarfI wove seven Fire scarves (two were finished the night before the show so aren’t photographed here) and five Mountain Sky scarves.951-2951-1DSC_4675949-1950-2I will do another post of how the Artery show looks.

Leftover Yarn

Never throw anything away. At the risk of being called a Yarn Hoarder I don’t throw any chenille away if there is at least a three yard length. IMG_7961Three yards (or a little less) is the length I need to make a scarf. I dumped out a couple of bags of leftover chenille and organized it by color. This made two warps.IMG_7964The first uses the yarns on the left side of the upper photo, going into the purple range.IMG_8020The color isn’t very good on this photo but this was mostly yarns from the right side. Here are the finished pieces:946 chenille scarfI used a fine cotton weft for this scarf mainly because I couldn’t figure out which color of chenille would work across all of these stripes. By using a fine weft the color of that disappears and the eye sees just the warp color.947 chenille scarfThis scarf was different. I used a blue chenille weft. The blue dominates but pulls all the other colors together.

These scarves are for sale at the Artery now and on my website.

Across the Road in 2015

I thought I did a post like this for 2014, but I didn’t. You have to go back to this post to see what it was like Across the Road in 2013. My plan is to make a photo record of the changes that I see from standing at our mailbox. To do that correctly I’d need to do it on the same day each week (or month), with the same camera, using the same lens, and at the same time of day. FAIL. Here is what I have (and it’s probably more interesting this way).DSC_1949January 22, 2015. DSC_2242February 5.DSC_2247February. Almonds are blooming.

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April 11. An overview of Across the Road looking east. Our place is in the foreground. The dogs and I cross the road in near the houses in the middle of the photo and usually walk south until we can get on the dirt road that goes along the canal. If I take the usual route I walk along the big canal, turn left (going east) between the brown and the green, turn left again (north) between the brown and the trees, follow the tree line along the ditch until I get back to the main road, and turn south to home. That is 1.8 miles. If I don’t have much time I can take a short cut right where the main road curves and head north on a road that separates the two brown areas. If I want to vary it I can continue to follow the big canal south and there are more roads to follow that way.  

In this photo our pasture has started to green up because I irrigated in mid-March. Normally the irrigation district doesn’t provide water until April or May but due to the drought we have been getting water earlier. In 2014 we irrigated in January. The green in the background of the aerial photo is hay or  wheat or barley fields. DSC_5211April 26, 2015. The field has been bedded, ready for tomatoes.DSC_5459May 3, 2015IMG_4493June 9, 2015DSC_7884July 22, 2015DSC_8855August 9, 2015across the roadAugust 30, 2015cattle egretThis is a photo taken across the road, from Across the Road. (That is my pasture looking west.)DSC_0072The alfalfa field that is the green triangle in the upper right in the aerial photo.DSC_0089Beans that were planted after the wheat harvest in the are shown in the triangle that is the upper center of the aerial photo.DSC_0413September 5, 2015.DSC_0546September 9, 2015. It took 4 days, working 24 hours/day to finish harvesting this field.IMG_6564September 23, 2015. Back to the beans. The dry plants have been put into windrows waiting for harvest.waiting for lunar eclipseSeptember 27, 2015.DSC_1475October 6, 2015. Field disked and bedded waiting for the next planting. I’m told that it will be planted to sunflowers this spring.DSC_2793November 29, 2015. If we have regular rain I can’t walk across here because it gets too muddy. There have been very few days that we haven’t been able to walk. DSC_2913December 1, 2015. View of our place, looking west across the field. We need to see more green on those hills.

A White Christmas

We spent a lovely Christmas Day with my son and other family members. We got there in the morning before everyone else so that we could spend some time in the forest that is their backyard. I am not a snow person, but I can brave it occasionally, especially when the sun is out, and I’ll admit that it was a nice touch to have a beautiful snowy view from inside Matt & Kaleena’s warm house with a fabulous woodstove to back up against. The morning began, however, with us  sliding backwards down Matt’s driveway in our Explorer. (I am planning to sell this before the next smog deadline, so no new tires for us.) That little glitch solved (by rocking the Explorer out of the snowbank and then parking at the bottom of the hill), we geared up with showshoes and foot warmers in our my boots and walked down to Jenkinson Lake. DSC_4315

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DSC_4301What time I have spent in the snow has been well after the storms have come through. There is something very different and beautiful about being there immediately after the snowfall…DSC_4310…while the branches are still heavy with snow.DSC_4264

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DSC_4283I loved seeing the snow clear to the tops of the trees. As the sun started warming the trees, snow cascaded from the highest branches.DSC_4295I spent the night at M & K’s (Dan came home for chores and dog duty) and the next day Dan came back and brought Chris and Meryl with him. Then we celebrated our private family Christmas.IMG_8003The younger generation helping the older one with digital issues.DSC_4321Chris plays a mini-flute sporting his new Storm Trooper oven mitt.IMG_8019Here are my sheep/barn related Christmas gifts. My wheelbarrows constantly need their tires pumped up so Dan got the fittings to go on an extra air compressor in the barn. There are tubes and tires for my handtruck. Dog treats from Hawaii. Sheep and dog magnets. All the attachments for my new GoPro (birthday present). Footrot Flats is a comic strip series that I think only a sheep farmer would enjoy. Hand and foot warmers packets that I’ll share with Farm Club in the barn. IMG_8013We took another hike that afternoon. This was a great two-day Christmas celebration with family. And it’s not quite over. The kids are taking us to see StarWars in a couple of days. The only thing missing was my granddaughter and her family but at least we spent a week with them not long ago.

 

Hawaii, Day 7

Last person standing. That’s me, for our Hawaii family vacation. Well, Matt and Kaleena were still here but staying somewhere on the beach. My father-in-law and his wife live on the Big Island and that is where we spent most of the trip. My husband and Chris and Meryl had left for home from there. Katie and her family left the night before after spending the day at Pearl Harbor so I woke up alone in my Waikiki hotel room and decided to spend some time on the beach with my camera before going to the airport.DSC_3783View to the southeast with early morning sun.IMG_7901View to the northwest.IMG_7903Not too many people in the water yet…DSC_3801…but there were people on the beach…DSC_3805…working out…DSC_4095…and getting ready for business.DSC_3920The beaches are protected (created?) by rock walls built out into the ocean. When walking along one I realized that it was like looking down into an aquarium tank. There were fish everywhere. I took lots of photos but in most the wave action obscures the fish. There are a few that aren’t bad for my first time trying to photograph fish. The only ones that I later identified are these needlefish.DSC_3810I wish that I’d had my new GoPro with me and a long stick to reach into the water.DSC_3951I sort of like this photo because the ships looks pixelated, but it’s just the containers. DSC_3820Still on the wall, the sun was getting higher.DSC_4044-crab

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DSC_3996Here is an activity of which I was unaware–feeding bread to fish –these tourists brought an entire loaf and threw crumbs into the water.DSC_3986It’s a great way to bring fish (and pigeons) to you, but I can’t imagine that it is an approved method of watching wildlife. I was seeing plenty of fish without bribing them.DSC_3962As the sunlight hit the water the fish were easier to photograph…DSC_4011…especially these almost luminescent needlefish.DSC_3946

DSC_4077As I walked back to the hotel, the beach was waking up.DSC_4073

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DSC_4127Many more people out and about.DSC_4119

DSC_4123By the way, this was not my hotel. Mine was a few block off the beach in the low(er) rent district.

Back to winter in northern California. It sure didn’t feel like Christmas time in Hawaii. Aloha!

Hawaii, Day 6

After spending five days on the Big Island, my daughter’s family,  my older son and his wife, and I flew to Honolulu with the main goal of seeing Pearl Harbor together. Katie and her family would fly home that night, Matt & Kaleena were staying a few more days north of there, and I was flying home the next day. DSC_3662Unfortunately this is a blurry photo but I like the image. I sat in the row in front of Kirby on this short flight. We picked up a rental car (had to upgrade to carry all of Kirby’s luggage) and drove to Pearl Harbor.DSC_3673 The monument includes several memorials and museums and it would be easy to spend a full day immersed in this history …but not with a toddler on board. We chose to tour the U.S.S. Missouri while waiting for our assigned time to see the U.S.S. Arizona Memorial. (Unfortunately all boat rides to the Arizona were cancelled due to windy conditions.)IMG_7842The USS Missouri was the last battleship built by the U.S. and was the site of the Japanese surrender, ending WWII. The ship also served in the Korean War and, after being modernized in 1984, in Desert Storm.DSC_3701The Missouri is now a permanent museum in Pearl Harbor.DSC_3693There were a couple of photo opps before entering the ship.USS Missouri

DSC_3704A lot of the ship is accessible and there is a wealth of information  covering the three eras when the ship was in use. It would be easy to spend several hours taking time to absorb everything. I have included just a few photos here.IMG_7862There is a display about the Japanese pilots who died in kamikaze attacks near the end of WWII. It is a moving exhibit but I don’t understand what can drive a young man to this end during that era any better than today’s suicide attackers (although I thing there is probably a world of difference in their reasoning). IMG_7864So sad…as are all parts of war.

There is a warren of passages below the main deck where people worked, ate, and slept. IMG_7868

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IMG_7873The living spaces for 1600 enlisted men were spread throughout the ship.IMG_7876Part of the modernization in the 1980’s.DSC_3731Back on the main deck we looked up and saw…DSC_3732Katie, Kurtis, and Kirby.DSC_3738A disappointment was not being able to go to the U.S.S. Arizona Memorial. This memorial is directly above the Arizona that still holds many of the 1177 men who were killed during the bombing that sunk the ship. DSC_3686During the day my thoughts kept going back to the National Museum of the Pacific War, the moving exhibit in Fredericksburg, Texas (birthplace of Admiral Nimitz) that we saw in July (blog post here). It’s well worth your time if you’re traveling in that area.DSC_3746Toddlers don’t care about this stuff.  Chasing birds and picking up flowers from the lawn are more their style. (If I chose to make this blog more commentary and opinion this would be the point to discuss innocence and when/how does it change.)

After spending much of the day at Pearl Harbor, we found my hotel in Waikiki. Katie, Kurtis, and Kirby relaxed there while waiting to catch the red-eye back to California. I had one more day of exploring.

 

Hawaii – Day 5, Part 2

One of us napped between visiting Hawaii Volcanoes National Park and our next stop. DSC_3594However, that didn’t help Kirby want to step down into beach sand today anymore than the last three days. DSC_3623The Punalulu’u Black Sand Beach is well-known to host the endangered Hawaiian Green Sea Turtle.DSC_3625We weren’t disappointed.DSC_3576We found several turtles basking in the sand while onlookers watched from outside the stone “corral” that prevented them from coming too close.DSC_3578The population of these turtles was in steep decline during the 1970’s due to harvesting of turtles and eggs, but numbers have increased since protection by the Endangered Species Act. The adults weigh 200-500 pounds and they are thought to live 60-70 years.DSC_3568The turtles weren’t moving so I don’t think that Kirby really noticed them.DSC_3606Matt found a little more action. IMG_7825There were a few turtles swimming and eating in this pool.DSC_3611I took a video of this one as he (she?) approached me, blowing bubbles. DSC_3634Even if Kirby had been a fan of the beach, she would have probably been too tired to enjoy it here. DSC_3638It’s better to be in Mama’s arms…DSC_3651…or better yet, sitting on a towel next to Daddy.DSC_3653

DSC_3646Beautiful water, whether it’s in blue…DSC_3646 - Version 2…or shades of gray.DSC_3643

DSC_3643 - Version 2

 

 

Hawaii – Day 5, Part 1

I have been back for less than 10 days and this Hawaii vacation seems like a world away…I guess because it is. Back home it’s cold and drippy and I have battled a bad cold and eventually won.

I just spent a good part of the day sorting through hundreds of photos so that I could print some for a photo book for Kirby, share a lot with my family on Shutterfly, and finish up my blog posts. I am discouraged to find that I have had to edit so many to remove lots of spots. Some were from an outwardly dirty lens (my fault for not paying attention) but others are spots that I can’t clean. My camera and lenses need to go to the camera doctor and be cleaned inside. The dirt really shows up with blue sky and ocean landscapes.

Dan had left for home (life of a teacher) on Tuesday night. Chris and Meryl left for home on Wednesday. The rest of us visitors wanted to see what we could of the island before leaving the next morning and still get back to spend the evening with my father-in-law and his wife. We started by driving up the mountain towards the Mauna Kea Observatories, hosting telescopes operated by 11 different countries.

Do you see that white spot on the skyline in the photo? The telescopes are at 13,796 feet above sea level. The mountain itself rises 32,000 feet above the ocean floor. There are a lot more facts and a cool photo of the mountain top at this link. We didn’t make it all the way to the top. The visitor center is the recommended stopping point for all 2-wheel drive vehicles, especially rented ones as well as for all children. We had a full day ahead of us without including a trek to the mountain top (beside the fact that we had a toddler with us) so we satisfied ourselves with a look around the visitor center. The other photo shows an array of telescopes that I assume are put into service for special viewing.

Our next stop, a couple of hours away, was Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.

IMG_7785We spent a little time in the visitor center and museum but mostly drove through the park, getting out to look at points of interest…DSC_3470…and take photos…DSC_3491 Kaleena & Kirby…a lot of which, unlike most of my exploring/hiking trips were of family. DSC_3514 K'sI’m not sure that even amazing, steaming volcanoes can compete with beautiful family pictures…that is, pictures of beautiful family.DSC_3524However there were plenty of other arms to hold Kirby on this adventure so I did try to get some photos of our surroundings, especially of the area of rain-forest where we walked. DSC_3541While much of the Park is more desert like this part of the trail is through lush rainforest.DSC_3554

DSC_3532 Matt & Kaleena

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DSC_3547This had already been a long day for Kirby but she did well in her backpack.IMG_7806This is on the wall to the entrance to the lava tube.DSC_3549Lava tubes are formed as slow moving  lava cools to form walls, but the inner hot lava continues to flow.IMG_7810

IMG_7814Leaving the lava tube.DSC_3517 Meridian tourSeen in the parking lot. Should I decide to move to Hawaii, do I have a job waiting for me?IMG_7817Catching a nap before Part 2 of the Blog.

Hawaii – Day 4

Tuesday began with a trip to another beach.DSC_3303 Kirby (1)While the big kids swam and paddle boarded and snorkeled Kirby and I walked on the beach. Or I should say I walked on the beach and carried Kirby. She still didn’t like the sand or the waves. At one end of the beach we found lounge chairs and buckets. As long as there was no sand she was happy. Another first for me. I went snorkeling with my kids and there is video to prove it somewhere. Very cool.IMG_7759-Kona brewingDan had to get back to work and was leaving this morning so we cut the beach visit short. After he left we drove to Kona and had lunch at the Kona Brewing Company.DSC_3308 Kirby in backpackThen we loaded Kirby into her new backpack and went walking around Kona. IMG_7767-Ironman startThis is the dock overlooking the start area of the Ironman triathlon. My father-in-law (who lives in Hawaii and is why we were all here) has completed the Kona Ironman twice and for many years volunteered here. Chris has plans to someday qualify for entry in Kona.DSC_3316 Matt and geckoSome of the local wildlife…DSC_3319 gecko

DSC_3322…and color.IMG_7768-basket makerWhile the kids were looking in other shops I found a basket weaver and bought a few of his things.DSC_3324On the way back to our house we stopped north of Kona to catch the sunset.DSC_3345DSC_3341DSC_3367