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Smart kitty
Alpaca Smiling
switchknitter
Last night I needed to clear some remaining (and unusable) yarn off two bobbins. I put them on the lazy kate and started pulling the yarn off onto the floor. While I was doing this, Bengal came in. OMG MOVING STRING. He tried to go after it as I took it off the bobbin. I pushed him back and said NO very firmly. He tried again. NO, BENGAL. Repeat three more times.

And then, the coolest thing happened. He sat down on all fours two feet from the growing pile of yarn, and just calmly watched me as I spent another two or three minutes unrolling the yarn. He actually paid attention to the word no. When I was done I scooped up the pile of yarn in one hand to throw it away, and petted him for a bit with my other hand. Good kitty.
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Knitting with my handspun: first attempt
Alpaca Smiling
switchknitter
I knitted these fingerless mitts with some Corriedale two-ply I'd spun. They came out meh. The Corriedale wasn't really soft enough, and in places I'd overtwisted enough that it was practically barbed wire. HOWEVER! Knitting with my own handspun taught me a hell of a lot about what to do (and not do) to get the yarn I want, so I'm really glad I made them. I'm going to soak them in some warm water and Johnson's Baby Extra-Conditioning Shampoo later as an experiment, to see if I can make them a tad softer. I'm not expecting much, but it too will be a good learning experience.

Pacific Rim: awesome.
Alpaca Smiling
switchknitter
Saw this Tuesday, and wow was it good. I love how it kept making me think it was going to do something typical for an action movie, but then would go completely the other way with it. Also, the fight scenes were great fun. The internet tells me there are plans for a sequel. I hope it's as good as this one.
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The sweater from a minor hell
Alpaca Smiling
switchknitter
I'm currently knitting a top-down cardigan for my sister. I altered the original pattern a bit, and... I swear this sweater is evil. I've had to restart it three times. This time I had to rip back because somehow it was ten inches too big. I ripped back to the point I'd marked as the right width, and remeasured... and it was four inches too small. I swear to Bob, every fucking time I measure this thing it's a different gauge.

I'm not really mad or anything, it's just fun to swear at it and say I need a priest to exorcise the yarn. I had ripped back a skein and a half's worth, and I'm back to work on it today.

I will not be defeated by a mere sweater. Hopefully it'll work out this time. Otherwise, I think it's going in the back of the closet...
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That goes rather quickly...
Alpaca Smiling
switchknitter
Franklin Habit had said that long draw gets a lot more spinning done in a shorter time, and boy was he right. I've almost completely filled up a bobbin with a fairly thin singles, and I only spun for maybe 2 hours in total this evening. Wow.

A friend mentioned on Facebook that she was getting into knitting while listening to audiobooks, so I got Wil Wheaton's Just a Geek to listen to while spinning. It's incredibly fun. Thanks for the idea, Devi!

Spinning wheel, revisited
Alpaca Smiling
switchknitter
I started spinning again! I haven't touched my wheel in a few years. I got sick of not being able to draft worth shit and always fighting the wool, and it just wasn't fun.

Franklin Habit's newest blog post has him trying long-draw spinning and really enjoying it. so I figure, WTF. If he can like it, I'll try too. I opened a browser tab to YouTube and started looking for videos on long draw.

Turns out I wasn't drafting right at all. I didn't know I was supposed to go from the fold, not from the end of the piece of roving. No wonder I hated it. I spent the last 45 minutes spinning and loving it. Me, a playlist of history podcasts, some Corriedale... It was great and I'm going to do more shortly.

I need to watch some more videos and read some more stuff on technique, because I'm having trouble getting the right amount of twist, but drafting was soooooo easy. I couldn't believe the person who taught me to spin never told me how to do it! I always wondered why everyone liked it and I had such problems. I mean, I liked making yarn, but it was so hard! And now I know why. Woot.
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TOO MANY BOOKS
Alpaca Smiling
switchknitter
I used to be a serial monogamist with books: read one until finished before starting the next. In the last month, though, I've been experimenting with polybibliophily. I think I've taken on too many at once. I have five going right now, and I just simply don't have the time to make each feel properly loved. So this leaves me with a quandry: whom do I temporarily set aside? The book on mathematical topology a friend sent me that I can only read in small doses at a time because of the complexity? The Python book I've been ignoring for a week anyway?

I want to live post-singularity so I can fork my brain, let the child processes read a bunch of books at the same time, and then I can re-incorporate the memories of reading them (as well as the information in the books) into brain Prime. It would be the only way I will ever get to read all the books I want to read in this lifetime.
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Mississippi Personhood Amendment
Alpaca Smiling
switchknitter
Originally posted by james_nicoll at Mississippi Personhood Amendment
Originally posted by soldiergrrrl at Mississippi Personhood Amendment
Originally posted by twbasketcaseat Mississippi Personhood Amendment
Originally posted by gabrielleabelleat Mississippi Personhood Amendment
Okay, so I don't usually do this, but this is an issue near and dear to me and this is getting very little no attention in the mainstream media.

Mississippi is voting on November 8th on whether to pass Amendment 26, the "Personhood Amendment". This amendment would grant fertilized eggs and fetuses personhood status.

Putting aside the contentious issue of abortion, this would effectively outlaw birth control and criminalize women who have miscarriages. This is not a good thing.

Jackson Women's Health Organization is the only place women can get abortions in the entire state, and they are trying to launch a grassroots movement against this amendment. This doesn't just apply to Mississippi, though, as Personhood USA, the group that introduced this amendment, is trying to introduce identical amendments in all 50 states.

What's more, in Mississippi, this amendment is expected to pass. It even has Mississippi Democrats, including the Attorney General, Jim Hood, backing it.

The reason I'm posting this here is because I made a meager donation to the Jackson Women's Health Organization this morning, and I received a personal email back hours later - on a Sunday - thanking me and noting that I'm one of the first "outside" people to contribute.

So if you sometimes pass on political action because you figure that enough other people will do something to make a difference, make an exception on this one. My RSS reader is near silent on this amendment. I only found out about it through a feminist blog. The mainstream media is not reporting on it.

If there is ever a time to donate or send a letter in protest, this would be it.

What to do?

- Read up on it. Wake Up, Mississippi is the home of the grassroots effort to fight this amendment. Daily Kos also has a thorough story on it.

- If you can afford it, you can donate at the site's link.

- You can contact the Democratic National Committee to see why more of our representatives aren't speaking out against this.

- Like this Facebook page to help spread awareness.




Breakfast Casserole
Alpaca Smiling
switchknitter
I made up this recipe, basing it loosely on one I found on SparkPeople.

16oz frozen hash browns
6 pieces cooked turkey bacon, crumbled
1/2 onion, diced
1 bell pepper, diced
1/2 cup 2% cheddar, shredded
1.5 cups Egg Beaters
1/2 cup 2% milk
1 tsp. black pepper
1 tsp. salt

In a 9"x12" casserole dish, layer the hash browns, bacon, veggies, and cheddar. In separate bowl mix Egg Beaters, milk, salt, and pepper. Pour over the layers. Bake 50 minutes at 350 degrees.

It was really, really good. Although next time I think I'll add another 1/2 cup of egg...
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The history of the future
Alpaca Smiling
switchknitter
Your Flying Car Awaits: Robot Butlers, Lunar Vacations, and Other Dead-Wrong Predictions of the Twentieth Century by Paul Milo is a very cool book. It's funny in a lot of places, and thought provoking in others. My favorite funny prediction is one from the 1950's that nuclear bombs would be used for things like blasting tunnels or demolishing buildings. These weren't science fiction writers doing the speculating, either. The predictions in this book comes from respected (at the time) think tanks, futurists, and scientists of all stripes. Fascinating stuff. The last chapter talks about predictions that were right, like HG Wells's vision of an Internet-like worldwide network. Definitely worth reading.
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