Thursday, 30 May 2013

100 favourite things for my 100th blog post

Hard to believe that I have actually reached my 100th blog post. I never imagined I would keep this up for so long. I'm surprised I had the stamina.

But one thing I never lack is things to talk about. So in honour of my 100th blog post I decided to put together a list of 100 of my favourite things.

Adriaen Coorte Asparagus
Ale
Anchovies
Artichokes
Asparagus
Aveda

Bande dessinée
Samuel Beckett
Belgian chocolate
Belgian beer
Belleville Rendez-Vous (film by Sylvain Chomet)
Bicycles
Bitte Kai Rand
Roberto Bolaño

Cats
Camels
Carpets
Celadon
Central Asia
Chartreuse

gardening at the allotment
Danskos
Deserts
Dogwood

Endive
The Etruscans
Eurostar

Fiat 500
France
Frogs

Gardening
Grapefruit
Green amber
The Green Ray (film by Éric Rohmer)

Habu Textiles
Handel’s Messiah
Hats
Holst Garn

Iris in the Jardin des plantes, Paris
Ice cream
Iris

Le Jacquard Français
Japan

Kindle
Knitting

Linen
Longchamp
Luxembourg Garden

Mauviel
Herman Melville
Metro
China Mieville
Mont Saint Michel
Museums
Mustard

Navy blue
New York
The New Yorker
The New York Review of Books

Olive
Oreos

Paris
Paleolithic art
Père Lachaise Cemetery
Pickles
Pistachios
Playtime (film by Jacques Tati)
Pomegranate
Pork
Princess Mononoke (film by Hayao Miyazaki)
Pumpkins

Quilts

Ravelry
Rhubarb
Rome
Rouen

A Matter of Time, Frank Serra, Bilbao Guggenheim
Sauternes
St Pancras station
Scandinavian design
Seinfeld
Frank Serra
Shawls
John Singer Sargent
Snakes
Spain
Stalker (film by Andrei Tarkovsky)

The Tale of Mr Jeremy Fisher
Teal
Textiles
Tintin
Trains
Traveling
Tulips
Turkey

UK
USA

Van Gogh

Tom Waits
The Wire
Wonkette

Xinjiang

Margeurite Yourcenar

Zombie films

Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Yarn stash database

Ravelry has a great online database function to store information about your yarn stash. This is really useful because you can then search their massive database of yarn patterns to find just the right project for your yarn.

But I wanted to see if I could find out other interesting information about my yarn stash by manipulating the data in Tableau. Tableau is data visualisation software that allows you to create infographics about your data - basically a souped-up version of Excel.

Here's an infographic I created of my yarn stash by primary fibre and colour, sorted by weight.

infographic also available on Tableau public

It is very clear from this infographic that the vast majority of my yarn is rather surprisingly not green, as most people who know me and my colour preferences would expect, but grey. However, a quick peak at my completed projects on Ravelry will make it clear that this is because although I buy a lot of grey yarn, I do not knit it.

Also, a big chuck of that grey is an enormous cone of Donegal aran tweed which I plan to knit up come this winter. I have two Brooklyn Tweed & Co projects in mind.

Stowe, a fabulous waffle textured voluminous jacket you can wear either way up.

© Brooklyn Tweed/Jared Flood

And Amherst, a comfy cabled sleeveless dress.

© Brooklyn Tweed/Jared Flood

But why am I talking about winter in the middle of spring (other than because it doesn't feel anything like spring)?!

Here's another infographic that includes information about yarn company and where I bought the yarn.


Interactive graphic is available at the tableau website

This image makes it clear that Habu Textiles is my favourite yarn company. I have a LOT of Habu in my stash to get through, most of it in nice summer fibres like silk, linen and rayon.

I'm hoping to use up some of that Habu silk and linen in a lovely tank top by my favourite designer Olga Buraya-Kefelian.

Foldover Top © ori ami knits

Because even if prospects are not currently looking up for warm weather, that is no reason to give up using my favourite fibres. And anyway, I must keep knitting if I want to keep on top of that yarn stash!

Monday, 6 May 2013

Time to start weeding

After a long spell of very cold weather, spring finally arrived in the middle of April. The warmer weather and sunny days mean I have finally managed to get down to the garden. I'm busily putting all those seeds I bought in Paris into the ground.

4 out of 6 beds sowed, potatoes in the foreground

The busyness doesn't end once everything is planted, because in the meantime the weeds are growing faster than the vegetables. It is already time to get down to my main gardening activity - weeding.

Gardening means killing things


Sadly, gardening seems to be more about killing things than growing them. Growing vegetables to eat is a constant battle against pests that also want to eat them and weeds that want to replace them.

When I first got my plot three years ago it was completely overrun with weeds. The old gentleman I inherited it from had tried to control the weeds - primarily ground elder - by covering the borders with wood chips, black plastic and in some places even sheets of glass!

Given the state the garden was in, I decided that this method of control was futile. I was encouraged to use the scorched earth approach, and liberally sprayed glysophate everywhere. Fortunately our allotment is located on an old Victorian dump site, so no one is precious about chemicals.

After killing off the ground elder, I enlisted the help of my husband to dig up the ground where the weeds had been growing. I then sifted through the soil and pulled out as many roots as possible - at least three compost bags full.


bags full of weeds and shards of glass.

Seed weeds and root weeds


I categorise weeds by how they spread - either by seeds or by spreading roots, called rhizomes. I don't worry too much about seed weeds - they are relatively easy to pull out when they are young. Root weeds like ground elder are another story. Even the smallest portion of root left in the soil can sprout again, hence the need to dig them all out. I wasn't entirely successful in removing all the ground elder roots, but at least I was able to minimise the problem - and now I can individually dig out any plants that appear.

The ground elder was confined to the borders, but there was another mysterious root weed* invading the beds. I bought a long weeding tool and assiduously dug out the monstrously long roots whenever they appeared, like kraken rising from the deep. The first year was the worst, but my vigilance has reduced these horrible weeds to only a few appearances in each bed.

The kraken weed with innocuous looking leaves and hideously long roots

Year of the dandelion


The funny thing about weeds is that the same ones are never a problem from year to year. Once you manage to almost eradicate one through obsessive weeding, the next year a new one takes over.

This might be the year the dandelion becomes my enemy. Although a seed weed, dandelions can be difficult to dig out if they hunker down and hide in thick grass. You have to wait until they reveal themselves with their cheerful, bright yellow flowers, and then you can swoop down and pry them out.

I removed every single dandelion flower from my plot yesterday, filling two buckets full (I defy you to find one dandelion in the image above!). I didn't have the energy to dig up every plant, but I got rid of the flowers and most of the buds. I'll be keeping a gimlet eye on them from now on.

The flowers go to seed once they are picked, so must be disposed of carefully!

* The roots of my mystery weed are similar to ground elder, but they seem to go down much deeper, and the leaf is smooth-edged rather than frilled. If anyone can help me identify this weed I would be most appreciative!