I completed the Duxbury sweater from Simply Shetland and sent it off to Chelsea, after I tried it on. I wanted to wear it for a day or two but the weather wasn’t going to allow her to wear it for too much longer this season.
I love the way it came out. I enjoyed the Celtic knot in the front and back and had fun attaching the shoulder straps. Perhaps the armholes are a bit big but…
Now I am on a felted clog binge. I had wanted to make these for a long time and the local Michael’s had a sale on Paton’s Classic Merino. First I made a pair for myself and then DH and my son wanted a pair. I will surprise Chelsea with another knitted item. The Paton’s Classic Merino felted easily – I have to finish all the felting projects quickly because we move onto the boat May 1 and will no longer have access to a top loader washer. I erred in the cuff of my pair and decreased much more than suggested but I have a narrow foot and they fit great. I felted DH’s and am finishing my son’s.

Too bad I am finishing these super warm clogs just as the weather begins to improve. Hopefully the moths won’t get to them before I need them again.
Now I have just selected my knitting project for our backpacking trip to the Grand Canyon – of course I am not finished packing yet but have decided on a laceweight Pi shawl Light to carry, compact and should take forever. I am going to use a pattern from A Gathering of Lace, called the Shetland Tea Shawl. It’s basically a variation of EZ’s Pi shawl but all the math has been done.
I have plied my Kood aid fingering weight and am happy with the results. I think it will become a scarf or shawl. I am experimenting with black overdyeing to get a deeper tone (?) for some of my other Kool Aid yarn.

I will be sad to leave Fire Island in a month. The winter flew by and I even made some knitting friends here, through Ravelry and the Spinning Study Group of Long Island. At least the internet will keep us in touch and I’ll be sailing through this way again. The SSGLI meets monthly and also runs a fiber study group, where I have learned a lot about breeds of sheep and spinning techniques. Last weekend there was a workshop and I had a spinning immersion. I’ve concluded that my Kromski spinning wheel will join me and the cats on the boat at least for the first leg of our journey.
I looked forward to the snowstorm all weekend. How childish that I was looking forward to an unscheduled day off work. I only work 2 days a week and will have to reschedule all these patients anyway but….yipeeeee!! Overnight the house was shuddering with the wind. Snow frames all our windows and the wind and sleet are still blowing.
I’ll remember this sweater because it is about my 4th Fisherman style sweater and the first where I have gotten rid of the cable needles. I worked with techniques from EZ’s knitting glossary and a video I found on 
The cowl has been reworked again. Since it is too big and I am too lazy to rip it out, I have now knit up an I-cord so it fits snuggly. It’s great to wear when I run because I like my hair in a pony tail and hats don’t stay on.
And for a random photo, this large sea creature was offshore last week, hmmmm.


Tim and I were on a quest today. I wanted to see the snowy owls that have been seen at Jones Beach and was afraid they may leave as the weather warms. We drove out to West End Beach 2 and met a mixed batch of birders. The first group we met was happy to point us in the right direction although we didn’t really know where they meant. The second group was quite a contrast and were quite closed and tried to discourage us from looking. Tim’s strategy was to use the binoculars to look for groups of bird watchers who might be watching the birds we were looking for. This didn’t work too well but then someone told us that the area had become so popular that it was fenced off. This we could find. Even then, we wouldn’t have been able to see the Saw-Whet owl sequestered there until a photographer showed us it hidden in a pine tree. It wasn’t the Snowy owl though so we were off to the nature center. There the guide told us they hadn’t seen it that day but had seen birders in the west end of the park. This seems to be our best strategy, find the birders who might actually be looking at something and then try to find it. We saw a snowy owl but it was off in the distance and really looked like a piece of styrofoam.



There’s a barge offshore and it’s pumping sand onto the beach through a big pipe.
The seagulls are having a feast on the critters deposited with the fresh sand behind the tractors.
from my deck today, when the skies cleared and yesterday.
In fact, it was so nice today that a charter fishing boat was out.

We awakened this morning to the pitter patter of little feet – above our heads. We looked up and the skylight was covered with what I think were Eastern Starlings that were taking advantage of the ice melting off the skylight.
I am so excited. Since we packed up all our possessions last spring, I stored my well used and seasoned electric waffle maker. I love waffles. In the interim, I have become very creative with different flours, buttermilk and make all sorts of pancakes but they are not the same. And while Tim has agreed to install an oven on the boat for our year of cruising (he can’t go a year without apple pie) we won’t have the power for an electric griddle on the boat or next summer when we move to Massacussetts as lighthouse keepers. Essentially we will be off the grid for the next couple of years and I need waffles.