17 April 2008

Number 250

Wow - this is my 250th post! Who knew I had so much to say? Well, I knew, and since I like to write, I guess it makes sense that I would make it to 250 posts. I guess the more surprising thing is that anyone besides me reads my blog. I've made so many friends, and continue to meet people who I now consider close to me - which is such an improvement over my legions of imaginary friends ...

Anyway, thanks for stopping by, commenting, whatever. I hope you'll stick around.

This week's question:


I’ve always wondered what other people do when they come across a word/phrase that they’ve never heard before. I mean, do they jot it down on paper so they can look it up later, or do they stop reading to look it up on the dictionary/google it or do they just continue reading and forget about the word?

Gee, this has never happened to me - HA!

Most of the time, I try to continue reading to see if I can figure out the meaning of the word or phrase in the context of the story. If it is something that I can't fit in anywhere, I'll generally look it up. To be honest, most of the time I'm too lazy, so I "decide" what it means and move on.

This has led to two instances where I ended up with weird results. The first was when I was a kid, and read the Nancy Drew books. I had never encountered the word "sleuth" until then. However, I figured it out in the context of the stories - except I pronounced it to myself as "slee-uth" (short u), because well, that's what it looked like to me. When I heard someone use the word - pronounced correctly - I couldn't figure out for the life of me what they were talking about ...

The second one is really stupid when you get down to it. I would come across dialogue where one person would use the contraction "c'mon." A lot of the time I realized what it was/what it meant, but occasionally I couldn't remember, and would think it was short for "See you on Monday." Needless to say, I would be really annoyed when one character would be talking to another one and say something (I thought) like "See you on Monday, let's go to the park." I would think to myself *what* are they trying to say??? How dumb! Though even writing it at this moment makes me laugh at myself, so that's a good thing.

12 April 2008

Come Sail Away ...

As promised, here is a picture of my latest finished project, The Sailboat Hat:

I am so pleased with how well it turned out, and how even my somewhat lame sewing skills managed to place and secure the applique pieces so that it actually looks balanced. Personally, I think it looks yar!

For those of you who are interested, here are the details:

Pattern: Sailboat, from Itty-Bitty Hats, by Susan B. Anderson.
Size: 0-3 months.
Needles: US7 double points.
Yarn: Tahki Cotton Classic in colors denim, red, navy, white. (The color numbers are: 3001, 3818, 3997, 3856, but I don't have the bands in front of me to know which number goes to which color ...)
Started: March 20, 2008.
Finished: The pieces were all knitted by March 30; I sewed the knitted applique pieces onto the finished hat on April 6.

I think that Ben and Halden will really like it. (Doughboy will like it if I show it to him while also holding a treat ...) And hopefully, they'll give us a picture of the baby wearing it. If so, you know I'll post it here.

In other news, look what Brigitte sent to me!

This is adorable! It even includes Timmy (the littlest sheep), which I may just have to make for The Tim.

(I never doubted that someone with such a lovelly name, who also has cats, would be nice - but this is extra nice ...) Thank you so much, Brigitte!

Except now I have the song in my head again ...

08 April 2008

Random Acts of Thinking

Maybe it's just me, but ...

So I finally finished the Sailboat hat for Doughboy's soon-to-be-born baby brother. I took it to work today, to show some of my knitting co-workers. A non-knitting - and incredibly literal - co-worker walked past my desk at some point before I had put it away:

Co-worker: What is that?
Me: A baby hat for my next-door neighbors.
Co-worker: Did you make it for their baby?
Me (in my brain): No, I just give out random baby hats to see what people will do.
Me (in reality): Well ... yes, for their baby who is due at the end of June.
Co-worker: Will it last until then?
Me: If I cover it with a dark cloth, and put it under the magnolia tree in our garden.
Co-worker: Seriously?
Me: Yeah.

(Pictures of the hat as soon as I have a chance to take some. Hopefully before it spoils.)

Congratulate yourselves while you're here ...

blog readability test

See you at the next Mensa meeting!

The Garden Kitty

Thanks for all of your nice comments about the Garden Kitty. But as I told a friend, if he knew that strangers could see him and were talking about him, he'd have a stroke! So I'll just say thanks, and not cause him any more trauma than he experiences on any given day by telling him ...

Virago Modern Classics

I have a pretty decent collection of these books, though I haven't seen any for a while. I was cruising around on some book blogs, and came across a link to this article, which I thought was really interesting. I only knew bits and pieces about how it all got started, and what had changed along the way, so it was nice to learn the whole story. Like any publisher's offerings, some are more interesting to me than others, but after reading this, I'm glad I have as many as I do. And most of them were bought second-hand, but in excellent condition, for one or two dollars at a used book store near where we lived in Chicago. Even better, as far as I'm concerned.

Funny

I have been meaning to share this with you since I got my MP3 player, because it was one of the things that The Tim had already downloaded for me. You may have already seen it (as many of you have been in the current century for about eight years now), but if not, take a look, it's really funny! (Keep your speakers on, the sound is part of the fun.)

05 April 2008

March Book Report; The Letter G

I read two books, and otherwise caught up on some magazines for the month of March. Overall, quite a successful enterprise.

My book of the month for the Book Awards Reading Challenge was, coincidentally enough, March, by Geraldine Brooks. (This book won the Pulitzer Prize in 2006.) I chose this book for two reasons: 1. I was curious to see if it worked, and 2. I've read good things about Brooks' writing, and, since my mother's name was Geraldine, figured I should give her a try.

March is the story of Mr. March - the father who is absent for most of the book Little Women. I will admit to being extremely skeptical of this choice - as I told a friend, I really don't like people messing with my classics! And to be honest, I didn't really spend too much time worrying about Mr. March when I read Little Women, though his daughters and wife spent a lot of the book being concerned, and missing him.

I was very pleasantly surprised at how much I enjoyed the book. Geraldine Brooks very clearly made sure to pay attention to the details of the original story, and to be sure that it was told in a proper historical context. Mr. March is, from what I have read otherwise, also based on Bronson Alcott, who has always fascinated me. The story takes us through Mr. March's life, from his time as a young man, traveling through the south selling household goods, to his meeting and eventual marriage to Marmee, to his experiences as a chaplain in the Civil War. The story manages to be complex without being confusing, and I found Mr. March to be pretty interesting, both as an individual, and in his observations about people he knows, including Thoreau and Emerson. Brooks has an excellent descriptive style, so that it is not hard to imagine the places Mr. March visits, even if you have never been there.

I'm glad that I read this book, since it was a complement to Little Women, without being sentimental or too intrusive on the story of the March girls. I would recommend it to anyone interested in seeing what someone could do with the slightest information about a character in the original story.

Next up was Laced by Carol Higgins Clark. I was at the library, and looking for something that I thought would be an entertaining, quick read. I saw this book, and though I have never read any of her titles, I have read a lot of her mother, Mary Higgins Clark. The story was about an antique lace tablecloth that goes missing during the main character's honeymoon in Ireland. So, we have: lace, Ireland, mystery - all things I like. What the heck, I gave it a try.

It was in fact, an entertaining and quick read. The depictions of the people encountered in Ireland, and the places visited by the couple trying to solve the mystery was really enjoyable, reminding me of certain things and locations that I remember from my trip there a few years ago. The mystery was mystery enough, not requiring a lot of tracking of details, which was fine, since my brain was just not in the mood. When I find myself looking for something similar down the road, I may try another Carol Higgins Clark book.

In the meantime ...
G is for

Garden Kitty!

He is my constant companion when I'm home, and often "assists" me when I am writing posts, by sitting in front of the screen, and occasionally pawing the keyboard. He joined the family a few years back, after being a stray who was living in our garden for a month or so. We referred to him as "Garden Kitty" to differentiate between him and the inside cats. When Hurricane Floyd hit, we brought him inside, so he would be safe.

He is a very good kitty, and a sweet boy, if very skittish. He never received a proper name, because we thought of too many good ones, and couldn't decide! His middle name is Ignatius, though, after St. Ignatius Loyola (this is what happens when you are the product of a Jesuit education). So even though Garden Kitty is, as The Tim says, "more of a title than a name," it's what he answers to, and it suits him now like no other name would.

Though ... as you can see from this photo, sometimes it's hard to tell which end is where ...

01 April 2008

Hats and technology

April Fool's Day ...

Because I am easily amused, I got a charge out of Ravelry today - in the forums, they added little hats to everyone's Ravatars, I am guessing for April Fool's Day. I have an Uncle Sam hat, which amuses me on several levels. (Clearly I need to get out more.)

Continuing in the hat theme ...

Over the weekend, I finished knitting the hat that I am making for the soon-to-be baby next door. Now I need to knit the little parts that will make up the sailboat, and sew them onto the hat, but I'm pleased already with how it looks:

I'm sure the rest of it won't take that long to do, and I'm hoping to finish it completely by this weekend. The last couple of days, I have been working on other things, mainly because I'm in one of those moods where it is hard to focus on only one project for any length of time.

Maryland Sheep & Wool

I just realized the other day that Maryland Sheep & Wool is only a month away! I have signed up to take the Rosie's bus again this year, and am looking forward to it. I haven't really saved up much money for it, like I usually do, so I'm hoping that I can have some kind of rough idea of specific things I'd like to buy before I go, so I don't get too carried away. One good thing about taking the bus, is that there is only one rule for the Rosie's bus: no livestock allowed! As a result, I know that my purchases have to be limited in at least one way ...

Last year, I missed meeting up with Barb, but I did get to meet Ann and Liz, who I now think of as two of my favorite people (watch - they'll be going in disguise this year to avoid me ...).

Technological advances at chez Ravelld Sleave ...

Well, who would have imagined, but I have made further advances into twentieth-century technology! I think I mentioned that I received an MP3 player from The Tim for Christmas. Because a) he likes gadgets, and b) he knows I'm slow on the technology uptake, he was kind enough to have quite a bit of stuff already downloaded so that I could enjoy it right away. This past weekend, I managed to download two episodes of Cast-On (all on my own - film at 11!), and listened to one of them during Earth Hour on Saturday evening.

Next up: trading in the ol' abacus for one of them new-fangled calculators ...