settling back in

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I love being home.  Our family trip to upstate New York was fun and restful in some ways, chaotic and exhausting in others, but regardless, it is always so nice to come home.  When we drove in from NY on a Monday afternoon, Brandon had about two hours to quickly unpack and then repack before his flight left for a week-long work trip in California.  So, even though we had a week back at home, it didn’t quite fully feel like we were “back to normal” without Brandon around.

This past week it was good to get back into our usual rhythms.  I’ve noticed that I don’t quite feel settled into a place until I’ve been cooking or baking in it.  Making that first loaf of homemade (gluten-free) bread and filling the house with that smell feels like coming home.  I was busy this past week making gelatin gummies for the kids, a big batch of granola for Brandon and I, bread and “snack bars” galore.  Phoebe has stopped eating her usual Lara Bar snack in the mornings and so I scramble to find something she will eat in place of it.  She is pretty limited with what she will snack on and we are trying so desperately to increase her caloric intake, so for her to drop a favored food always sends me back to the drawing board and results in lots of receipe testing.

Our days have been simple.  The weather has been roasting hot and humid (ugh), and the kids have still been busy outside, coming in with cheeks flushed with heat.  I don’t love summer, but I try to make the best of it.  Picking blueberries and flowers from local farmstands, and savoring the daily afternoon thunderstorms helps me endure it.  Our little porch garden hasn’t done very well, and I miss having the larger plot we had at our last rental.  Sigh.  Dreams for the future.  Yesterday we had a really informal “half-birthday” party for Phoebe and Noah at my parent’s neighborhood pool with their favorite little pals.  I didn’t snap any pictures (gasp!) but it was fun all the same.  Their half-birthday was really back in June (20th and 23rd) so when you celebrate the half-birthday late, what on earth do you call it?  It was such a treat for the kids, though, who often find it hard to have a party with their friends around their birthdays (which are the week of Christmas).  It was fun for me, too, to see the children playing and swimming together and gather with some of my favorite friends.

I’ve been busy finishing up a few knitted projects.  My brother and sister-in-law brought back some yarn from Iceland for my birthday and I knitted some slippers for myself with one ball of it.  I’ve tucked them away for winter but I’m already longing for those first cool wisps of fall air.  I also finished up the Antartkis shawl that I made for a lady I used to babysit for back in my high school days.  It was what I solely worked on during our trip to NY so I was able to finish it fairly quickly (for me) and she picked it up this week.  I loved knitting it, especially since there was no purling and it was a really simple/easy pattern and yet still interesting.  When I’m knitting something I grow attached to it in some way, all that time spent fingering the yarn and bent over it with concentration and enjoyment.  It’s hard to give it away or to attach value to it, but also such a sweet thing to be able to make something special with my hands for someone else!

Phoebe’s homeschool co-op begins in about a month (!!!!!) and so my mind is shifting to all the projects around the house and all my piles of clutter and unfinished business that I hope to have organized before our first year of school begins.  A friend has offered to give us a couple of twin beds for the kids, and so I think we’ll be rearranging bedrooms for the children.  I’m craving a major house purge.  I’m hoping to organize my desk area and clear out a little space that can be for schooling.  I’m also hoping to squeeze in a camping trip with some friends before school begins, too.  It feels way too soon to be talking about our first child going to school, and the sentimental part of me is resisting this big change, even though I’m super excited to begin, too.  So many books to read!  Curriculum still to pick out!  School supplies!  House projects!  And still, to fit in time to read long snuggled with children on the couch, to stay up late for fireflies and late evening walks.  I want to hurry through summer because fall is my favorite, but also am so mindful that this is our last summer EVER before our lives begin to revolve around school, and so I want to enjoy each muggy, buggy day.

yarn along

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I finished my icelandic slips and cast on this week for a sleep sack for one of my best friend’s baby due in the fall.  I really love it so far, almost done with the bodice and about to split for sleeves.  Knitting baby items = pure joy.

Also I began reading The Light Between Oceans because I don’t have enough books going already (ha), but I really do need a good novel.  I’m probably a third of the way through it and enjoying it though it does have some sad elements and the protagonists keep making decisions that give a sense of dread of what is to come in the book.  I guess thats what keeps me reading, though I know heartache is probably ahead.

Joining with Ginny‘s weekly yarn along today.

yarn along

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I finished the Antarktis shawl for a friend, finished-knit photos to come soon!  My brother and sister-in-law brought me back some Lopi yarn (!!!) from their recent honeymoon to Iceland, so I cast on this week for a simple pair of slippers.  I think they will be so cozy and special because they truly came from Iceland!

I haven’t been doing a lot of reading lately, it seems.  Phoebe and I recently finished up an abridged/illustrated version of Anne of Green Gables during our read-aloud time, and we are five or so chapters into Caddie Woodlawn and enjoying it so far.

Joining with Ginny today to share what we are knitting + reading.

yarn along

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Hello blogosphere, again!  I really missed you last week while we were away in upstate New York but it was good to disconnect for the week for the most part, aside from posting to instagram.  I have so many pictures and stories to share from our trip, more later this week hopefully!

All week long I’ve been knitting this Antarktis shawl per the request of a friend.  I started it on the drive, had to rip out a couple of times and start over, and am just a few rows from finishing today.  I have love love loved knitting this pattern and working with this yarn and colorway, and I will feel quite sad to let this beauty go.  I think I need to knit one for myself now!  😉

I admit that reading has fallen by the wayside this week in lieu of knitting, but I have been trying to work my way into Classical Christian Education Made Approachable as I peruse resources and prep for beginning home education this fall.  Also, aren’t these flowers lovely??  I picked them up at my favorite farm stand this morning after picking blueberries with the kids.  Sigh.. it’s good to be home.

Joining with Ginny today.

 

yarn along

 

 

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I cast on last night for a little newborn pilot cap for a friend’s baby.  I’m hoping I have enough yarn left in this ball for it, we shall see!

I haven’t been reading much this week, but still reading The Shepherd’s Life when I can.  We are headed out of town on Saturday morning and I have been a busy bee preparing for that.  I’m hoping for some long stretches of reading and knitting during the car ride and week away!

Joining up with Ginny + Nicole today.

yarn along

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Just plugging away at my precious cowl, reading a few books but this one has been top of the stack this week.  Of course, I heard of The Shepherd’s Life originally through Ginny but  became intrigued with it lately in thinking about the context of shepherding in the Christian life.  I am always interested in learning more about farm-y things, but also curious how Rebanks’ experience as a Shepherd might better inform my understanding of Christ as my Shepherd.  Recently at our church, our pastor felt God’s nudge to step down and we are, as a church, in a season of searching for a new pastor.  I think my soul feels a bit bewildered, a bit like a sheep without a shepherd.  Anyway, I don’t seem to get much reading done lately, more knitting.  I try to squeeze in a few minutes a day before bed but my progress is slow!  Did you see my last post with pictures of the finished lori shawl?  I’m so happy with it.  It feels important to finish and record progress in a season where most of my labor seems to produce slow results.  Little moments here and there add up to something beautiful in the end, right?

Joining Ginny today for her weekly yarn along, where we share our current reads + knits.

summertime lori

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The Lori Shawl, my first real shawl, knit with Quince + Co. sparrow, which is Italian linen, in colorways moon + sans.  It is different to knit with linen and took some getting used to, but after months handling it, my fingers miss it.  This shawl was the most relaxing knit and easiest to take with me wherever because it is just garter stitch all the way.  It turned out to be bigger than I expected, I ended up using 6 skeins.  I made a few mistakes along the way, one little hole that I couldn’t seem to figure out how to fix, but I still absolutely love it.  It is bigger than my kitchen table so blocking it was a challenge with three little ones around, but I made a spot on my bedroom floor and it dried quickly, so we managed.  It feels so dreamy after blocking, the drape is perfect.  I could see myself knitting this pattern again in a wintery wool for sure.  I’m so thankful for this lightweight, summertime shawl and can’t wait to finally wear it!

yarn along

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I finished up the Nantucket throw blanket a couple of weeks ago, but am just now getting around to snapping pictures of it to share with you here.  We are busy enjoying it, as you can see, I keep finding someone snuggled up in it, which makes me happy. 🙂  I originally wanted it as a throw for our bed but it is a little bit smaller than I had hoped, and the kids keep dragging it back out to the living room to snuggle with while reading books.  I love the texture and coziness it adds to our home!

I’m still knitting the precious cowl this week but have somehow made some sort of mistake and I’m on hold until I can rip back (so tedious with lace!) and get back on track.  Somehow I have more stitches than I should.  Ugh.  So in the meantime I’m doing finishing work on my lori shawl and knitting up a few more dishcloths for a gift.

I’m still reading My Antonia, I put it on hold to read When Calls the Heart, which I finished up a couple of days ago, and am a little over half way through My Antonia.  I’m more into it now, but still not sure what I think.

Joining with Ginny’s yarn along today.

yarn along

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Still working on my precious cowl, my first venture into lace + I really love it.

Still reading My Antonia but also reading The Railway Children with phoebe while the other kids are napping and I love this book so much.  I can’t remember if I ever made it through the whole thing as a child, but it is actually quite engaging for me now.  I find myself looking forward to snuggling up with Phoebe and finding out what these three delightful children will be up to next.  I especially like that they are good figures for Phoebe to look up to: adventurous, looking out for the interests of others, honest, helpful, loving and compassionate, while trying to solve the difficult circumstances they find themselves in.  It gives us some simple talking points about behaviors that we admire and want to cultivate in our own home.  Mostly though, we just read it and I let her draw her own conclusions. 🙂  This old copy was given to me as a child by my grandpa on my tenth birthday so it’s a treasure and we love the watercolor paintings that accompany the story.

Joining with Ginny today.

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yarn along

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I bound off on the Nantucket throw last night as well as the Lori Shawl (two projects in one night!  woo hoo!) and pictures of those finished knits will come after weaving in ends and blocking.  I cast on the Precious cowl last week sometime, my first time knitting lace and working with a chart and I really love it so far.  After the crispness of the linen in my Lori Shawl, this super soft yarn feels luxurious.  It was a perfect small project to take backpacking with me this last weekend, which I did, and didn’t get as much time to work on it as I had hoped being that we were constantly dealing with winds and rain.  It was still really fun to knit in my sleeping bag by head lamp while the winds howled and whipped outside our tent.

I’m still reading Wild and Free, wrapping it up in a couple of days I hope, but I couldn’t resist starting a novel of some sort.  I’ve seen Ginny recommend My Antonia as one of her favorite novels and I spotted it at the library and figured I must check it out.  I’m just barely into it but enjoying it so far.

Joining with Ginny today and her weekly yarn along.