Saturday, September 25, 2010

Knitting Failure

Warning: This post contains upsetting stories about careless use of yarn in public.


I’m so STOOOOPID. ARGHHH!
I had a beautiful afternoon. Biked around the city and ended up at Lake Union (where I think they’re having the grand opening of the park?). But then I got a little claustrophobic like I always do in crowds and picked the least crowded, sunniest place to sit-- the pier. To knit. To knit my beautiful Noro striped knee-highs.
But then I had to tear back like 15 rows because I carried the yarn some stupid way and it sucked, and while I was doing that a puff of wind caught one of my balls of yarn (the one ball I wound into a very clean center-pull ball) and blew it off the edge into the water. I had no idea yarn could cause such a range of emotions. And I had to hold my curse words because there were children next to me! skalhgkjahsfkfkfkfk. I tried pulling it up but it just unwound so neatly from the center and it was soaking up water and I thought I was going to cry. Someone asked me if I was fishing, one lady said aloud “I doubt that yarn is any good even if you do get it up here, after it’s soaked in that water,” and mostly the people around me backed away slowly because I was losing my cool.
So I took off my shoes, found the nearest ladder and coaxed that ball through the water, against the wind, to somewhere close where I could grab it. Started going down the ladder, saw HUGE spiders, and went back up the ladder very, very quickly. I was almost ready to admit defeat when this dude my age came up, said he didn’t care about spiders, and grabbed my yarn.
So it’s saved. But now I need to dry it out. Ugh.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Wild Mushroom Dye

*Note, I took a mushroom dye class!

Carson and I went backpacking last weekend, opting to hike during the dark and rain. What an idea. The rain chased us up the trail, we set up camp quickly, and huddled into the tent to avoid getting any more soaked than we already were. At 3 am I woke up and looked outside to see that our tent was completely surrounded by a lake of water 1-2inches deep in which we were the island... kind of. We hustled outta there and straight picked up the tent, moving it about 6 feet over to avoid tragedy. The seams held and we stayed dry. *Phew!
During the hike I noticed many types of different fungus along the trail where we hiked. We are having a wet fall in the Pacific Northwest that is bound to produce a good crop of mushrooms. It inspired me to do some mushroom hunting + cooking + dying maybe. I ordered a mushroom reference book (All That the Rain Promises and More: A Hip Pocket Guide to Western Mushrooms) from Amazon and hope to go searching a few days in early October, and again on like the 16th so I can have my specimens cross-checked by the Pros in Seattle to see if I am awesome.
The Puget Sound Mycological Society has great resources such as a pretty poster from 2009, wild mushroom recipes, the washington state harvest rules, and even a link to the annual Fungi & Fibre Symposium in Sweden! Can you believe it? A conference to discuss wild mushrooms and there use in knitting and spinning! 
Now I just need a few more things to make it all happen. The Rainbow Beneath My Feet: A Mushroom Dyer's Field Guide and Mushrooms for Color would be two awesome books to have on the subject of mushroom dye, and I'd really like to invest in a quality food dehydrator such as the Excalibur 3900 Deluxe Series 9 Tray Food Dehydrator - Black to preserve the mushrooms that I'd like to use later either for food or dye. The food dehydrator could go a long ways in preserving-- in some ways it's more efficient than canning or freezing and the limited space in my apartment loves that shriveled/dry foods store easily. I also need a few more pots for the dye process such as the Imusa Stainless Steel Stock Pot, 16 Quart and/or the Imusa Enamel Stock Pot, 12 Quart, Turquoise.
PS. I know you all are thinking that I'm about to kill myself by eating some poisonous mushroom that I identified incorrectly. For clarification, I don't plan on eating anything I find during my first trip (unless it's one of few edible mushrooms that is near impossible to misidentify), and if I do eat anything later it will be one variety at a time in very small portions. That way if I find myself poisoned I can at least take a sample to the doc with me. :) Besides, I feel really good about the future. Don't dash my dreams.

Do you have any thoughts you'd like to share on dying with natural pigments? Or ideas about mushroom forays near/around Seattle and the Puget Sound?

Friday, September 10, 2010

Baked Zucchini


A tasty dinner of zucchini (stuffed with cheese, onions, sesame oil and breadcrumbs) baked with lentils. Topped with a bit of tasty hot sauce and light sour cream on the side.
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Thursday, September 9, 2010

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Vacation

Ahhh. That's the sound of me relaxing every day this week. I am taking two weeks of vacation for myself before I start my new position and the days have been very nice. My first client is due to have her baby in about two weeks so I am on call (my first doula gig!) and cannot leave town, though that isn't stopping me from having a great time.

I made yeasty pancakes for breakfast and served them with a friend's home-canned blackberry preserves.

From Seattle: Year 2

Kitty and I have been spending quality time together cuddling, playing "bird" chase with the feather toy, and surprising each other around the apartment. I nearly died when I saw him balancing on the window ledge that I left open, and again when I watched kitty learn to climb the ladder. Kenobi is a big bag of love and acts more like a 2 year old every day.


From The Kitty Chronicles


Then I got bored and made up my mind to make pizza from scratch in the cast iron pans that I re-seasoned this week. The marinara was leftover from pasta that Carson made last week and was mighty tasty underneath all that gooey mozzarella, peppers, onions and pepperoni. Success!



From Seattle: Year 2

I've been knitting socks for Carson.


From Creations

And this afternoon I decided to bake zucchini bread when someone on Freecycle offered up two giant beauties from her garden. I made a plain mini loaf, a loaf with chocolate chips, a loaf with walnuts, and a loaf with walnuts and chocolate chips. And the larger of the two zucchinis is still on my counter top! On the menu for dinner: Baked zucchini stuffed with lentils.


From Seattle: Year 2

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Farewell AmeriCorps VISTA

This past year came and went quickly. The blur/haze of everything stands testament to the fact that we were busy, very very busy. I love the work that I did for the Red Cross, and I love the friends that I made in the VISTA program. Our site had unusually high numbers for VISTA this year and I feel lucky that there was such a large support network of my peers.

We commiserated about the woes of living in Seattle on $950 a month (VISTA stipulates that you cannot take outside work) over clearance lunches from QFC, found the city's cheapest happy hours for Friday evening fun (NocNoc, a goth bar that had dollar PBRs and tater tots until they doubled their prices, which means it's still cheap), bounced project ideas off of one another, and held each other up during those last few months of service that are always the hardest. We took turns emailing job prospects to those interested, challenged one-to-one in sudoku during our morning coffee/tea breaks, and sometimes just walked outside to soak up a little sun when its rays peeked out from the clouds. We gorged ourselves on free food in the kitchen, rallied over video game nights and smutty vampire novels, and mostly had a lot of fun together. The laughter, the tears, the sleepless nights-- it was all worth it.

As typical with AmeriCorps service, I am still reflecting on what this past year looked like in a big picture and am learning every day about the challenges I faced and the personal growth I experienced.

Our department with three VISTAs watched over all the volunteer intake, a huge project in itself. We implemented a new disaster volunteer training program, creating the standard operating procedures that would go on to be delivered statewide. We assisted with events for the Board of Directors, did grunt work in prep for our annual fundraiser known as Heroes Breakfast, and even supported the Seattle Helping Haiti concert. Almost everything we did was in collaboration with other departments and we always had the support of other VISTAs, staff members and volunteers. For my memory, here are some of our accomplishments from the past year:
  • Processed over 1,500 applications
    • This included downloading/printing volunteer applications, contacting their references by email, probably contacting their references again by email if they didn't respond, and possibly calling their references if we didn't hear from them the first two times. Then we emailed the applicant inviting them for a volunteer interview, and possibly emailed them a 2nd time if they failed to schedule their interview or didn't show up.
  • Conducted over 20 volunteer orientations (a two hour class introducing volunteers to Red Cross functions)
  • Interviewed hundreds of applicants
  • Processed over a thousand background checks.
  • Added 1,000+ new volunteers to our chapter's rosters
  • Scheduled, planned, & carried out 12 full-day disaster volunteer trainings, a streamlined & condensed training where we squashed about 25 hours worth of training, and gobs of paperwork into roughly an 8-9 hour day. These trainings were held at our offices, a local community center, various churches in our area (three different religious groups), a University, and three major corporations that have a commitment to supporting the Red Cross
    • Our smallest training held about 15 people, and our largest training included 130 volunteers!
  •  Worked a few shelter shifts after apartment fires left residents displaced
  • Helped out at First Aid Station Team events, providing first aid services at venues such as Seafair, Seattle Pride Parade, and the Fremont Fair & Solstice Parade.
  • Performed flashy CPR demos throughout the city, and even had Blue Thunder (the Seahawks drumline) provide us with percussion at 100 beats per minute.
  • Assisted with the volunteer training, staffing and scheduling for a 6 week photo exhibit at the Seattle Center, filling over 200 4-hour shifts.
  • Helped train University students in CPR & other life saving skills
  • Implemented a new Volunteer Management System that handles our electronic volunteer files, and began the arduous process of auditing all of our paper files and transferring information from the old system to the new.
  • The Diversity Committee (of which I am the chair) has successfully created a diversity training for new volunteers and staff that goes to the Important People this week for approval. Our first training has been scheduled and we are very excited that it finally came to fruition.
  • Built good relationships with volunteers (one of my favorite parts)



I'm sure that some of our accomplishments have been left out of the list but it looks pretty good as is. And our group looks pretty good too. Thank you AmeriCorps VISTA for a great first year in Seattle. And now onto the two weeks of vacation I will be taking before starting my new (permanent!) position with the American Red Cross Serving King & Kitsap Counties (that's a mouthful, eh?) aka Seattle Red Cross.

PS. I'm famous!