EZ sweater discovery story

It was still snowing and cold when I let Bode out early this morning but there was a heartwarming story in the Natural Stitches newsletter when I checked email.

I am still indebted to my friend Linda Lorenz for introducing me to Elizabeth Zimmerman’s Knitting Without Tears book after I moved to Champaign-Urbana IL for graduate school. Even if you are not fond of EZ patterns the attitude that comes with them is enough to make a novice into a rabid knitter.

With the current stretch of cold weather and snow there has been an incentive to pick up some knitting. I finished (except for putting elastic in the waistband) a pair of relaxed fit black knit pants following directions from Barbara Walker’s Knitting from the Top book. I have been pulling them on (she recommends trying on your garment frequently during construction) and they are warm and comfortable.

Currently on the needles is favorite pair of navy blue wool socks going through their second re-treading that is picking them apart at the ankle and knitting in a new foot when the toe, heel, and sole wear thin. I do some mending but my experience has been that by the time the sock gets that worn the results are better if you just redo the foot. I am using No. 1 size double point needles with fingering weight yarn I bought on a cone.

I used to pick up an odd skein here and there, but as I grow older have been finding yarns I like then buying a fairly large quantity of them. Once you “learn” a yarn, for instance by making a pair of socks or fingerless gloves before starting a sweater, you have plenty to work with for getting a design the way you like plus leftovers for repairs or remodeling (making a pullover into a cardigan, adding pockets or a collar) later.

No pictures, sorry. Those dark colors that go with everything and that become staples of your wardrobe do not photograph well at all. You can see many clear pictures in my 2004 Socks Blog (actually a collection of static pages).

Anyway, here are links to the story, courtesy of Natural Stitches:
Channeling Elizabeth Zimmerman
The Tale of the Green Sweater
EZ Was Here

My own Elizabeth Zimmerman connection is that I mail ordered yarn, books and accessories from her and her daughter Meg Swanson then discovered people knew them from their UW days in Milwaukee. The written out pattern is to be available for order soon on Meg’s Schoolhouse Press web site.)

Something seemed very familiar about the Twist Collective web site. When I looked at the footer, saw that it was a Joomla! site. Although I really like Joomla! I have found that it is just too complicated for many people. WordPress is my current suggestion for most people who want to set up new web sites. In addition to being easy to use, they seem to keep their database structure intact through upgrades. That means that those cute little Perl DBI:DBD scripts that excerpt snippets from the blog database and insert them as SSI continue to work.

Posted in Knitting, Technical | Comments Off on EZ sweater discovery story

snow!

The snow was coming down heavily and we had about an inch when Bode went at around 2:30 am. It is still snowing! I took this picture a couple hours ago, got interrupted to recharge the camera battery to download it then updating a web page but here it is:

Snow filtering through the trees, December 19, 2009.

Snow filtering through the trees, December 19, 2009.

I visited the borough police yesterday and then the auto insurance agent. There is still some hope that whoever hit my parked car will come forward. From the height of the scratches the officer said it was something big, probably a truck. I am thankful that I wasn’t in the car at the time of the collision on Monday, probably would still be shaking from the adrenaline rush.

Posted in General, Photos | Comments Off on snow!

Google Adsense

I set this up back in the dark ages (before Facebook, LOL) but then unwisely as it turns out put first my own web site, then several others I consult for onto the same Google Analytics account. In investigating this, discovered that I had a balance over $40 in AdSense, so decided to give it another look. The ads I put on a couple static pages on my needlework site seemed to be doing quite well displaying appropriate links.

Turns out adding the script for an ad block to the header.php file using the same approach you use to add Google Analytics code in WordPress to the footer.php file was causing a problem matching content on my blog’s home page which shows several recent posts.

So today I moved the ad block code to single.php which displays an indivudual post on one page. It seems to be matching content more effectively. I do seem to be getting a lot of WordPress ads probably because I left the acknowledgement in the footer.php file, but that is fine with me.

Posted in Technical | Comments Off on Google Adsense

five days

It has been five days since Bode’s seizure and so far no recurrence. It hasn’t been easy for him to get up and down since his arthritis got worse last winter, so being tipsy from the barbiturate complicates things. He had problems jumping when we first met, so he had probably been dealing with arthritis for some time. He is eating well, and even went out for a short walk two days ago. He is napping a lot, but for an older dog that is to be expected. Still remembering the welcome sound of toenails clicking on the kitchen tiles when he got up on Sunday after we returned from the vet emergency clinic.

Hate to sound like whining, but after going to Pittsburgh on Saturday and Sunday (100 miles round trip) without incident, on Monday afternoon with mild weather, no ice, and clear visibility, someone sideswiped my parked car and dented and scratched the driver side passenger door. This is the third time my parked car has been hit since I moved here, only the person who broke the mirror left a note and paid for the damage.

Something that apparently didn’t get taken into consideration when fossil fueled automobiles were adopted for our transportation infrastructure (treating public transit like Cinderella) was that a lot of otherwise fine people shouldn’t be driving. They didn’t choose to have seizure disorders, failing vision, frailty from aging, or inability to deal with the stress of driving. Driving is inherently dangerous anyway. I lost a good friend in a single vehicle accident two weeks ago. One of the tragedies of our society is that we accept unquestioningly the collateral damage. Even if only one person is at fault, many others can suffer consequences.

When I used to go on camping trips for several days or more, the first sensation when returning home (which was often Champaign-Urbana IL) was the pervasive odor of gasoline and exhaust fumes. Not sure how effective the climate talks will be, but perhaps unpopular changes in life styles in developed countries will yield unexpected benefits. After all, who thinks of a child wheezing with asthma when they turn the key in the ignition?

Posted in General, Rants | Comments Off on five days

48 hours post-ictal

Things have changed a lot here in the past two days. Bode had a bad seizure that lasted over an hour this time the day before yesterday.

We ended up going to Pittsburgh Veterinary Specialty & Emergency Center where Bode was examined and kept over night for observation. I brought him home yesterday afternoon. He was tired, thirsty, and hungry, but after I got him into the kitchen he started to get up on his own and although it is wobbly (ataxia), he is working really hard on walking.

He is on medication to prevent further seizures, but a lot depends on how things go in the next few days.

Posted in General | Comments Off on 48 hours post-ictal