Camping in Oregon

Finally back home in British Columbia.  We arrived from Australia and immediately set out on our annual family camping trip on the coast of Oregon state.  We go to a lovely state campground, at Nehalem Bay State Park, just south of Cannon Beach.  This photo was taken from the viewpoint on Hwy 101 as we approach Manzania and the campground.002

The campground is behind the sand dunes, and between the bay and the river.

008

 

This is the path from the beach to the campground,

IMG_1246

 

And from here you can turn around and look at the beach.

IMG_1275

 

Walking along the beach is great exercise, and we can literally walk for miles.

IMG_1360

 

The waves are fantastic.  Nothing like letting the sound of the waves lull you to sleep.

IMG_1379

 

It was great fun to have the whole family there, and to spend time with our grandchildren.  Highlights were the delicious, lively, and fun meals – note that I am closest to the wine.

DSCN0744

 

Another highlight was teaching the grand-kids to play bocce ball,

DSCN0731

 

I love the focus on Tommy’s face – he won that game!

DSCN0730

 

And, of course, we loved the sunsets over the ocean.

IMG_1395  IMG_1399

And so, until next year.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

On Today’s Walk

I love to get out and take a walk, especially when the sun is shining, the air is a little crisp, a light breeze is blowing and I am close to the water.  A solitary walk along by the river is a meditative experience, bringing my mind, my body, and the world into alignment. I walk in harmony with the world; I walk in beauty.

From our apartment door, I walk across Langley Park, cross the road, and I am on the River Walk alongside the Swan River.  The walkway is right beside the river, with no barriers against falling in.

IMG_0863

I shared the walk with birds drying out after diving for fish.

IMG_0861

 

I pass the pond, and walk as far as the bridge over to the little island.

IMG_0866   IMG_0867

I look across to the park on the island.  I think next time I will cross the bridge and explore the island.

IMG_0868

Walking back, I look across to South Perth on the far shore of the river.

IMG_0869

 

I listen to the wind rustle through the palm fronds.  I hear the call of birds, and the sound of the water lapping on the rocks.

IMG_0865

 

I return home relaxed and refreshed.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Spinning Again

I have been staying in the last couple of days due to the very windy and rainy weather.  Well, the rain had to come sometime I suppose.  Now it is starting to feel a little Winter-ish, but of course, not by Canadian Winter standards.

After spinning and weaving with bright colours lately, I wanted to go natural.  This is good old West Australian naturally coloured wool, called Moorit Beige, purchased from Bilby Yarns, here in the Perth Area.  After some research I discovered that “Moorit” refers to sheep which are brown in colour, and this is evident in the colours of this roving – from pale beige, almost white, through to medium-dark brown.

IMG_0628

This was easy and quick to spin, drafting very easily.  I spun two bobbins of singles and plyed them together, resulting in 205 meters (225 yards) of light weight 2-ply from 100 gms of roving.  The natural colours blend together in a very peaceful way.  I will probably make a pair of mittens, or a knit hat from this.

IMG_0854

 

Next came some fibre that had been sitting on my shelf for some time, and I had thrown it in my suitcase before coming to Australia.  It was a topknot from Aurelia, with black, dark teal, and some sparkly Angelina.  I must have had it on the shelf for six or seven years, so, I don’t remember the colour name.  the Aurelia topknots come in three distinct strands and can be spun in a variety of ways.  I chose to separate the three strands and pull each strand into small sections of about four to six inches long.  I then spun then in sequence, using the method of holding the piece over my index finger.  This gave distinct sections of black and teal and sparkly, but it looks great when plyed together.

IMG_0856

 

This resulted in 200 meters (220 yds) of medium 2-ply yarn, but it is not super soft.  Not sure what I’m going to do with this yet – I’m open to suggestions.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Handspun, Handwoven

Here are my latest weaving efforts.  I started with 100 gms of a wonderful soft braid of fibre from Sweet Georgia.  The blend was 50% merino, 25% bamboo viscose, and 25% tussah silk in a colour called tavern.  The colours were a blend of dark plum, golden yellow, sage green, purple charcoal and spun into reasonable long lengths of mixed colours.  I spun two bobbins of singles and then plyed them together letting the colours fall where they may in random loveliness.  This yummy yarn was soft to the touch and glowed with the silk and bamboo content.  

IMG_0427   IMG_0430

I used the handspun along with a pale yellow tencel to create a log cabin warp and used the same yarns in the weft.

The resulting scarves highlight the handspun yarn, and gently move in colour through the handspun to highlight the reds, then the golden yellows, and through to the browns.

IMG_0839   IMG_0843

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Melbourne the Magnificent

From Brisbane we flew on to Melbourne, and stayed at the Grand Hotel Melbourne, a historic and majestic hotel on Spenser Street, near the Southern Railway station.  Our comfortable accommodation was a loft apartment overlooking the railway yards.  The soothing sounds of the railway cars going over the tracks rocked us to sleep.  Running trains are always soothing to railway men.

Grand Hotel   room at the grand hotel

Shopping and eating in Melbourne was fun, the food was great, along with exploring the lane-ways and streets.  We took the free City Circle trams to get around the downtown core, and walked along the Golden Mile.  The Golden Mile in Melbourne commemorates how the discovery of gold shaped the city in the early boom-town days.  We also saw designer fashion shops with their own doormen.  Later we visited the more affordable Queen Victoria Markets and small shops of Melbourne.

IMG_0725   IMG_0799

Sunday, we explored the St. Kilda area and had a beautiful dinner while watching the boats on the water.

IMG_0730

 

We saw the iconic Luna Park.

IMG_0735

 

And I bought a new hat at St. Kilda Market.

IMG_0749

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Of Bats, Birds and Beaches

Ron had business meetings in Brisbane, and I was lucky enough to tag along with him.  Brisbane is on the east coast of Australia, and is about 4,344 km away from Perth, similar in distance as going from Vancouver to Toronto(4,372 km).

map to brisbane

We are staying at Scarborough Beach, which is on Moreton Bay and about 45 km north of Brisbane.  While Ron is working, I have been able to take long lovely walks along the beach.  The water varies in shade from blue to green, and the sand is mostly reddish in colour. The wetlands and shorelines are protected heritage sites, and contain a huge array of birds and sea life.

Scarborough Beach

I was sitting in my hotel room, around 4:00 in the afternoon, when my eye was caught by a huge bat flying by my window.  Looked out and saw several bats flying round and round, landing in the trees and feeding on the oranges and other fruit.  These bats were huge and moved incredibly fast.  I believe they were grey-headed flying fox because of their size.  According to the Queensland Museum the grey-headed flying fox has a dark grey body with a light grey head and a reddish brown neck collar of fur, have an average wingspan up to one metre and can weigh up to 1 kg.  In the photo I managed to take of a bat flying, you see the magnificence of the wingspan above the house rooftop, and compare it to the balcony doors of the hotel just beyond.  In the photo in the orange tree, where it was sucking the juice out of the oranges, you can see the reddish brown neck collar.  So exciting.

bat in flight

IMG_0708

 

Saw lots of varieties of birds here also.  Australasian Darters on the rocks spreading their wings to dry

IMG_0662

 

Australian Pelicans

IMG_0674

 

Australian White Ibis

IMG_0680

 

And Galah

IMG_0685

 

I took wonderful long walks along the shoreline here, enjoying the sunshine, the smell of the ocean, the natural beaches and the environmentally protected habitat for birds and animals.

IMG_0668 IMG_0661

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Western Australia Weavers Spin-in

On Saturday, the Western Australia Weavers Spinners and Dyers Guild held a wonderful spin-in for surrounding groups.  The day started early with registrations beginning as early as 8:30, and the day officially began at 10:00.  The hall was set up and waiting:

IMG_0639

 

Raffle prizes were wrapped and ready:

IMG_0643

 

The show and tell table filled up:

IMG_0644

 

Vendors prepared for sales under proudly displayed items:

IMG_0646

 

95 people signed in and found friends old and new:

IMG_0642

 

With morning and afternoon tea, demonstrations, lunch, games, prizes, shopping, spinning and knitting, a good time was had by all.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Spinning Away

I have been spinning, about an hour a day over the past few weeks.

I spun this beauty from a hand painted roving purchased from the Western Australia guild yarn cupboard and created by “woolgatherings”.  I had been hoping to work with local Australian products, but I found out later, that this is an American company that does small batch dyeing.   Kind of ironic to come this far and still be purchasing American.  Still it was a lovely roving to spin from.  The fibre is 50% Merino wool, 25% Bamboo, 25% Silk.  I wanted a challenging colour-way and this was definitely it.  The colours ranged from a dark red-brown, through light brown to pale yellow to pale green to turquoise.  Colours that may not exactly go together.  I split the roving lengthwise, spun two bobbins of singles, and then plyed them together for a medium weight 2 ply.  The colours matched up pretty well, with very little barber-pole effect.  The next challenge will be what to create with the yarn – knit or weave?  Any suggestions?

IMG_0632

 

Next I worked with some Tussah Silk roving, and dyed small handfuls in bright vibrant colours – blue, green, and red-purple.  I spun each colour separately, except the blue-green, which has very long colour runs.  The purple was a half-brick and has some subtle colour variations.  The resulting yarn is a fine 2-ply.  My plan for the silk is to weave an interesting fabric and then sew something three-dimensional from it, maybe a treasure box, or a fabric vase.  Fallback would be to make a scarf.

IMG_0633

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Silk Rewards

The silk warp that I struggled so hard to get on the loom, to the point where I almost abandoned it, has paid off handsomely with two vibrant and fantastically drapable scarves.  I wove one scarf in plain weave with a blue weft, and one scarf in twill with a red weft.  The dip-dyed warp provided runs of yellow, green, blue and red.  I’m so happy with the results.

silk scarves 13-06-10   silk scarves detail 1 13-06-10

silk scarves detail 3 13-06-10

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Beautiful Margaret River

We took a long weekend trip to the lovely Margaret River area of Western Australia.  Margaret River is a world-renowned wine producing region about 275 km south of Perth.  This region has a mild Mediterranean climate, and it was a wonderfully sunny and warm weekend for us.  We stayed in a two-bedroom flat at Abby Beach Resort in Busselton, with direct access to the beach in Geographie Bay.  The water was a glittering blue accent against the white sandy beach.

IMG_0486

 

Margaret River region is dotted with dozens of wineries, independent breweries, olive orchards, and sheep and dairy farms.  We drove from Busselton to Augusta and back enjoying the scenery and samples of wine, beer, and food.  We journeyed through Yallingup (the place of love), Gracetown, Augusta, Karridale, Witchcliffe, Margaret River and Cowaramup.  We saw lighthouses at Cape Naturaliste and Cape Leeuwin.

IMG_0600

 

We sampled a world of chocolates at Gabriel’s

IMG_0460

 

Visited wineries in gorgeous settings

IMG_0438

 

Found sheep who were also enjoying the vines

IMG_0614

 

And lambs enjoying the sunshine

IMG_0611

 

Drove down secluded country roads

IMG_0467

 

Met an Emu out for a walk

IMG_0462

 

And visited Australia’s only silk factory – note the amazing bright golden silk cocoons

IMG_0465    IMG_0466

A wonderful weekend of memories.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 3 Comments