Sunday, April 26, 2015

Yarn School!

Back in October 2014, two friends of mine from my knitting group and I went to Kansas to attend Yarn School. More specifically The Harveyville Project Yarn School. It is such a neat concept and definitely an interesting experience.

Basically the set up is the weekend event is held at an old high school in Harveyville, Kansas that has been converted to hold all types of creative workshops. Yarn School consisted of learning all about fibers, learning how to use a spinning wheel, learning how to dye fibers in various methods, visiting an alpaca farm and just meeting good people and having a fun weekend.

The school itself had a run down hipster feel to it with all sorts of knickknacks everywhere, old school lockers, and we slept in classrooms next to chalkboards. While I understand this concept is still a work in progress and for the most part manageable, the bathrooms could use a bit of an update.

I was super excited to learn how to dye yarn with Adrian from Hello Yarn. That was one of my favorite parts of the whole weekend and wish we had more time devoted to that lesson. Or more opportunities to do additional dying in the down time.

Spinning is hard work. Finding the right wheel, the right fiber, the right rhythm. It's a lot to think about and figure out how to coordinate all at once. I am not the best learner. I get frustrated quickly if I don't pick something up quickly. So I struggled with this part of the lessons. But I did enjoy it once I got the hang of it and one day hope to buy a spinning wheel to better learn this art.

Another favorite part of the weekend was the visit to the Alpaca farm. I think alpacas are my spirit animals. They love me and I love them back. Some days I daydream about living off the grid and owning a few alpacas.

Additionally, the food was fantastic all weekend long. I really wish they would put out a cookbook because I still think of some of the dishes. It was all made from scratch every day which isn't easy to do for over 20 people at each meal.


The school
Our beds
Lockers!
Beautiful sunrise
Sunrise from the men's bathroom. I liked the windows.
Crockpot dying
Trying to be creative with the dying
Colors!

Look at all the pretty colors drying
Adrian teaching us how to hand dye
Learning how to use a drop spindle
One of the spinning wheels I tried
Spinning in Action
Look, I made yarn!
Not bad yarn for the first time.
Alpacas!
I totally want an angora rabbit now
Look at the cuteness!
These sheep were scaredy cats and preferred hanging out behind the bush
Of course I had to take a picture of my Jayne hat next to Firefly Rd
Kansas was surprisingly pretty
All my finished yarns and fibers

Monday, April 13, 2015

Austrian meal

I have a great neighbor who is originally from Austria and she offered to cook me a homemade Austrian dinner. It was fantastic! I have never been to Austria and after hearing her stories about the country and trying some of their dishes, it is now on top of my list of places I want to visit. Hopefully sometime soon.

I need to get to the recipe for the appetizer because it is something I could eat on a regular basis. And the Pork schnitzel was surprisingly easy to make. I've always been scared of frying food, especially dishes that require breading because it seems like such a process but after seeing her cook, I think it's something I can easily do. I'll have to try and report back with my result :)


1. Drinks. This was a simple drink consisting of Campri and Orange Juice. A bit tart but refreshing.

2. Appetizer. Spinach salad with balasmic and olive oil dressing. Tomato stuffed with mixture of ham, onions, mushrooms, sour cream, fresh chives and other herbs.

3. Main course. Pork schnitzel, white rice with peas, cranberry sauce and a German Riesling.

4. Dessert.  A type of homemade sweet bread with vanilla sauce and a little shooter of chocolate cream. I also tried an Austrian drink called Almdudler - it'skind of like a ginger ale mixed with herbs. We mixed that with the Riesling to make a type of spritzer.

Friday, April 03, 2015

Cypress Top Historic Park

I had the opportunity to recently tour the Cypress Top Historic Park. It's a collection of buildings that founded the Cypress area, including an old farm house, gas station, dance hall, and general store. The general store was the best part because when the owner shut the doors in the early 90s, he left everything behind as is. So it has a great collection of random household items that people used to purchase on their drive from Houston back out into the country. Even had a little bar so the men could stop and have a drink while the women were shopping.

It is kind of fascinating to note the progress of this area. While Cypress is in Harris County, the same county as Houston, it was considered to be country farm land for years. Only in the past 20 years has it really developed into a huge suburb of Houston. Now days you can barely tell there was any farm land here - all huge subdivisions with multiple strip malls, fast food joints, etc. So it's nice that the Cypress Historical Society is able to preserve some of the history of the area before it all changed.

Love the old school Life Savers wrappers

All kinds of razor blades

I want an old cash register just because they are so cool looking

Too bad you can buy a Corona for $1.25 anymore


I love old maps.

This pump was in use till the early 90s.

The old gas station
1950s McCall's pattern book

The bar portion of the general store

Another angle of the bar
Hair products from the little barber shop
Apparently original Dr Pepper in bottles are a big deal to Texans

Beer!

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Boneyard Shawl

In the beginning of February, I was going on a trip to Mexico (I will blog about the actual trip separately). I decided I need something easy to knit to bring along on the trip. A project that was easy enough to memorize so I could knit on the plane, in the airport, or anywhere else. After a lot of stash diving, I decided it was appropriate to use yarn that I bought a few years back for my birthday considering the trip to Mexico was a birthday trip for me. The yarn is called Aquarius by Wollmeise. Fitting for a February birthday and a February vacation by the beach, no? It is a gorgeous teal green blue color and knitting it up is so easy. The pattern I picked is Boneyard Shawl by Stephen West. This is a great pattern because although it is a simple pattern, it really allows for the great color saturation to show off and with this specific yarn it is coming out very squishy and comfy. I have quite a bit of yarn, 2 skeins worth of the DK weight, so I plan to make it a large shawl (or until I run out of patience). While I am not done with the shawl yet, I have been Instagramming the progress in various stages and in various settings. So I wanted to show off a bit and let you all know that I am being crafty in 2015, albeit a slow crafter.

Decided to do some knitting by the pool in Mexico while waiting for my room to be ready
Knitting on the beach in Mexico


Knitting is a good waiting room activity

Knitting is also a good coffee shop activity

Some knitting at lunch with a knitter friend

Knitting while binge watching House of Cards

Knitting at my Sunday Morning Knitting Group

Saturday, March 14, 2015

Bridge School Benefit

One of the more exciting things I did last Fall was go to Mountain view, CA for the Bridge School Benefit. The benefit is a two day concert hosted by Neil Young to raise funds for Bridge School. Bridge School is a school that focuses on children with various disabilities so the money is going to a good cause. It's all acoustic and had a great line up including Norah Jones, Band of Horses, Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, Tom Jones, Florence and the Machine, Brian Wilson and Neil Young. This benefit has been going on for over 20 years now and has a huge following, selling out most years. If you get a chance, I highly recommend making the effort to check out at least one of the nights. All the musicians were fantastic but the two that really blew me away were Florence and the Machine and Tom Jones. They both just killed it and the crowd got so into it - so made for a great time.

Unfortunately my time in California was short. I flew in on Friday evening and flew out on Monday morning. Since the concerts were both on Saturday and Sunday, most of my time was spent at the Amphitheater. But I did get a chance to see a little of Mountain view. I have decided if I ever have to live in California, it would be in Mountain view and only because I got a job with Google. Google's presence in the town is literally everywhere. And just what little I saw of the office buildings and Google amenities for employees (parks, soccer fields, bicycles to get around, etc), I would love to work there.

If you get some time, check out Shoreline park. It has amazing views of the bay with a lot of great walking trails. Unfortunately it was a bit hard to get to without a car but thank goodness for Uber. The weather was beautiful so it was nice being outside enjoying the fresh air and sunshine for a bit. I could have spent all afternoon there just watching all the birds and ducks in the water.

We had breakfast one morning at Olympus cafe and it was so yummy.  I love a good breakfast and this place really hit the spot after a late night at the concert. Plus they knew how to make a good cup of tea which always adds extra points in my book. The waiters were friendly and while it was busy we managed to get a nice table outside and enjoyed the morning air. I loved the fact that they had a variety of Turkish and Greek pastries. So after breakfast, we got some goodies to munch on while at the concert.

For dinner one night, we stopped at Blue Line Pizza. Pizza is one of my favorite foods and this place was yummy. The bartender allowed up to sample different beers before we picked what we wanted to drink which was awesome. I hate spending money on an unknown beer and then end up hating it. The portions were big and we ended up taking a lot of pizza back to the hotel for a midnight snack later on. We got the caesar salad, cheesebread, barbeque chicken thin crust and make your own veggie thin crust to share.

The famous Google bicycles

I love Japanese Maple trees. Such a pretty red

The crowd from Night 1

Turkish tea and baklava!

 
Shoreline Lake


Ducks!



The view from Shoreline Park of the bay

Another view of the bay

The crowd on night 2

Tome Jones!

Tom Jones was amazing. Really!