This Is How Our Lawns Should Be

We’re blessed with a wonderful, warm, windy day fit for drying wool socks, some pants, and our couch cover! The clear skies are hosting the wind and there are birds galore flying everywhere. Most of our birdhouses are now in use throughout our yard. We have all kinds of wonderful bees and other pollinators going about their business of pollinating everything that lies beneath them.

A lot of people hate lawns that have anything other than what they consider premium grass growing in them. They make the choice to poison their lawns with the help of so-called lawn care companies and do-it-yourself products who use forever chemicals that seep into the ground and cause all kinds of cancers in our humans and pets.

dandelions and wild strawberries blooming in our backyard

What they don’t understand is that this stops the pollinators from visiting their yards. They miss out on homemade dandelion jelly, dandelion fritters fresh from the skillet, violet jelly, and the tiny wild strawberries. Mind you, most are eaten by the birds, but they’re still beautiful to look at.

This beautiful crab apple tree is buzzing with bees, birds chirping happily, and a couple of contented humans and their dog relaxing in the shade and enjoying the wonderful wind. We get to watch the birds eating their blend of sunflower and safflower seeds while listening to them sing.

We’re blessed with two varieties of crab apple trees. In the fall, there are tons of deep red crab apples from the tree in the above photo, to harvest for homemade pectin, which is what this tree provides, as well as snacks for me throughout late summer and into the winter.

green crab apple tree with white flowers and the bumblebees pollinating it as fast as they can

This white flowered crab apple tree provides green crabs to make homemade crab apple jelly. The bumblebees have been swarming this tree for the past couple of weeks and it’s a most wonderful sound along with the chirping of all of the birds. The robins are freely grabbing up worms and other bugs, the wrens are eating tons of spiders, and our lawn is happy.

The reason I’m concerned about the weed killers, turf builders, and other poisons used to control weeds and insects is that they kill most of the worms and beneficial insects traversing through our lawns, leaving behind their valuable castings that fertilize it. The insects and bees that pollinate our berries, herbs, flowers, fruit trees, and the food we grow are killed by these poisonous lawn chemicals as well.

Our lawn is very diverse in that it has tons of moss and deer mushrooms, several types of mints grow in and around it, and sometimes we’re blessed with stands of oyster mushrooms growing in the damp areas.

By the way, under weed killer/turf builder corporate classification systems, our herbs are also considered to be weeds. Whenever I see those signs showing that someone’s lawn has been ‘treated’, I turn around and walk the other way because these forever chemicals also harm our pets.

Enjoy your lawn and grow lots of weeds!

I wove these two dishtowels nearly 20 years ago!

The above dishtowel was woven from gray and white plyed, stranded, weaving cotton. While I don’t remember the grist, I remember enjoying sampling the structures in this towel and 18 years later, it dries dishes like a champ.

Handwoven cotton dishtowel

This dishtowel was woven using washed, spooled crochet cotton. It’s a bit heavier than most, and is sturdy and strong. It absorbs water 100% better than any commercial terry cloth dishtowel I’ve ever owned. It dries super fast as well!

The key to finishing dishtowels is to pre-wash them at least once in a washing machine, preferably a top loader. This pulls everything together.

spring fling dishtowel  version number 2 being woven
Spring Fling Dishtowel #3

This is the third set of Spring Fling dishtowels is currently on the LeClerc Dorothy loom and is being woven in a true plaid. I think it could’ve been more square, but I’ll need to acquire an appropriate reed to do that.

Spring is nearly here! Get busy and create something or sort your garden seeds and test them for viability.

Last year’s spring and early summer flowers that we grow at our home. A lot of these colors are represented when I dye wool and wool yarn!

Some of our flowering weigelias, forsythias, and crabapple trees!

Don’t just sit around doing nothing! Get your flowers and garden plants started now! Grow something new!!

I’ve nearly finished weaving the first two Spring Fling Dishtowels.

I found an excellent weaving draft software that’s actually Free and it can be used offline!! It’s called QuickDraw and you can get it at QuickDrawWeaving.com

The above photo is what the the first 2 Spring Fling Dishtowels as depicted by the software.

I drafted the next 2 dishtowels using the software and I can tell you that it’s pretty neat to see. I’ve always kept a notebook of everything I draft and weave. I still do because I’m a contingency planner.

The above photo is what the next 2 Spring Fling Dishtowels will look like when I continue weaving.

The rest of these towels are woven on the fly, while being notated in a notebook. I prefer creating on the fly because it doesn’t require a computer or electricity.

Get busy! Learn something new or make something you’ve never made before! It will keep your brain healthy!!

The weaving progress of the first set of handwoven dishtowels!

This was an interesting process for me as I’d mostly woven wool cloth and heavy rugs. I did these towels freestyle because I was fascinated by the patterns being created in the plaids. I love plaids, so this seemed most natural to me.

When the warp was all woven up, I cut off the weaving and finished up the dishtowels. I sewed all of the side ends in (weft) and hemmed the ends of each towel. The towels were shipped to the wonderful woman who gave me all of the cotton thread/yarn which led to the creation of these dishtowls.

I used my Singer 319 to hem these dishtowels.

Get busy and make something you love! If you don’t know how, get a book and learn (I do it all of the time!).

The first weaving of my own draft

I cleaned up the loom after removing the first finished weaving. I removed one of the 4-harness blocks and used the warp board that our son and I built 15 years ago to start a new weaving. I decided on dishtowels using #5 and #3 cotton.

I chained the warp while trying to maintain the cross. This is of note because I’d not chained a warp in over 12 years, so it was a lot of virtual hair pulling. I ended up losing about 3 yards of the warp because the cotton didn’t want to play well.

I slowly sleyed the reed and secured the warp onto a shed stick.

Threading the heddles went fairly smoothly and I enjoyed relearning the process. The biggest difference for me was that this was not my Nana’s antique rug loom, so it was easier.

The warp is ready to tie onto the back apron! This is a very interesting process when there’s a warp puddle waiting in a feed tub.

Tying the warp onto the back rear/back apron and beaming it onto the rear warp beam progressed fairly well. It’s slow and steady work and rushing isn’t necessary or desired.

It’s time to have a cup of tea and begin the weaving!!

That’s it for now.

Get busy with creating whatn you like, want, or need. Quit sitting on our brain and get busy!