December 26, 2012
A new baby in the family!
With the recent arrival of a new baby girl in our extended family (and what a wonderful Christmas present!), I jumped at the opportunity to start on the Sunnyside baby cardigan by Tanis Fiber Arts. I am using a skein of 4 ply Touch merino yarn I bought at the Craft & Quilt Fair in June this year and a pair of Hiya Hiya Sharp 100cm circular in 3.75mm. The cable is a bit long but it's the only one I have and it is not too much in the way.
I am in the middle of the first chart repeat and so far so good although I do have to concentrate. The yarn is very nice and soft and the colours are perfect for a little girl. I am making the 6-12 months size in time for her first winter.
Whilst winter is still a few months away, I want to finish this in early January so that mum can take it with her when she visits bub and the new parents.
So I'd better get cracking... happy stitching!
December 16, 2012
How crafty did I get while in NZ...
Well, I did bring knitting with me to our trip but all I did was 5 rows of the Haruni shawl... the other time I was too busy map reading and staring out of the massive windscreen of our campervan. The sheep dotted rolling green hills were my favourites and ah, yes, the never ending stretch of river and snow capped mountains!!
I did say I would elaborate on the visit to the Milton Woollen Mill!
Well, we were supposed to be backpacking, like we did when we were young - ahm! there is no shame in flashpacking! Anyway I digressed, I was just saying that I couldn't fit them in our backpacks so I just hand carried them on the plane... plus I wouldn't want to risk them getting lost with the luggage! I was very restrained as after all I don't need more yarn but I was at a woollen mill for crying out loud. I had never been to a woollen mill before and the prices were very reasonable... even Terry said so and encouraged me to pick up some... little did he know what "some" meant... hahaha - he was suffering from a nasty flu - not that I took advantage of that... They don't seem too much if looking at them like this... really. I have to add these to the Stash in my Ravelry page yet but let's not dwell on that for too long.
Another major crafty highlight of the trip is the visit to The Oamaru Textile Emporium. These ladies (Helen on the left and I forgot the other lady's name - me really bad!) were just so kind and lovely to chat to. We could talk all day! The rug they were braiding was amazing and so clever. They told me that this is actually an old American tradition which I googled to learned more. I found a few links on this and notably this one. I told them that I wanted to learn how to dye yarn and they immediately told me that they all do it there - wow!
In their showroom there is a massive loom and beautiful yarn and garments. I also found out that Doe Arnot is a local of Oamaru and sells her yarns there. She holds dyeing classes! I will have to contact Doe to find out what their schedules are... I promised Helen I would send her a hard copy of this photo which I have printed two copies of and will pop in the mail this week.
The biggest thing we enjoy about travelling is talking to the locals and as shy as I can be, I was so glad I opened my mouth.
After chatting with these ladies, I have started putting in some mental notes to follow up after we get home and they are:
- Look into doing some dyeing classes - I found one coming up in the Blue Mountains by Wooldancer so I will look into that closely - after all the location works...
- Visit the Bendigo Woollen Mill
- Visit the annual Australian Sheep and Wool show
- Visit the Merriwa's Festival of the Fleeces
- Plan to join yarn crafting retreat... - although I don't think I can make the Unwind Fibrecraft Retreat to be held in Dunedin next March, there will be others and I ought to be more aware of them and plan accordingly!
- Learn about the different breeds of sheep - while we were driving, there were so many different looking sheep and I kept asking Terry what they were, not that he knows but didn't stop me from asking!
They are obviously not my New Year resolutions - I wouldn't jinx myself like that :)
I should go and use some of the stash now....
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Campervan Adventure - New Zealand South Island (Part 2)
Following my last post on the first half of our campervan adventure to NZ, here is the map of the places we visited...
Part 1 of our trip ended with us chilling in the fun filled yet beautiful Queenstown... photos can't lie right?
Our next stop was Te Anau - one of our favourites! They don't call it the stunning Fiordland for nothing.
Check out our campervan site, right opposite Lake Te Anau! Can life get any better than this?!
Oh Doubtful Sound... we took a day trip with Doubtful Sound Cruise. We cannot say enough good things about the crew and how much fun we had that day... It also happened to be our 13th wedding anniversary - we couldn't ask for a better way to spend the special day!
We did see two Fiordland Crested Penguins but my camera couldn't pick them up clearly. They were very cute, I just have to make sure that image stays in my memory bank forever!
Back to Mr Munro, we visited the local museum as well as the exhibition located in the local hardware store, E Hayes & Sons on the main street of Invercargill. I think Terry was in heaven, a hardware store AND a legendary bikes museum!
On the way to Dunedin, we went through a little town called Milton, about 40 minutes drive south.
I remembered reading this blog post by Kiwiyarns Knits about a woollen mill in Milton... well even I am amazed at the type of information my brain retains :) Haha! Not on the main drag, no worries, a quick search on my iPhone (oh 3G connection, how I love you!), we quickly got a map and direction.
Judging by the smile on my face there, I was like a kid in a toy store. Even my man-flu ridden darling husband couldn't help but smiled at my giddiness. We pulled up onto the street and the big Factory Shop sign is blinking at me (well not really blinking but in my minds eye, all the letters were flashing!). I didn't take any photos in the shop but there is a cool museum in an adjoining room and I was happily snapping away. Oh yes the bags I was carrying outside of the door... more of that in the next post as after all this is a crafty blog and a discovery like this deserves its own post!
Yeah it was ah, abit chilly... freezing and windy actually!
Next stop is Oamaru! A really charming historical town and the Steampunk capital of NZ! We fell in love with this place... Ducks quacking by the door...
We happened upon their annual Christmas parade - what a fun event! Yeah I am a city sheep...
Ah yes I also found myself in a yarn store, The Oamaru Textile Emporium... How could you not check it out? It's not just a store, it's an emporium! ok I admit it, it's something else I remembered reading from the Kiwiyarns blog... The lovely ladies (Helen on the left and I am so ashamed, I forget the other lady's name!) were braiding a rug using wool blankets! I told me that this is actually an old American tradition. I googled this after chatting with them and what a wonderful idea. More about this in another post but Oamaru, I am coming back to visit!
After being charmed by Oamaru, we made our way to Christchurch. Words can't describe this amazing city and its people's resilience. We took a tour into the red zone and we couldn't help having that lump in our throat feeling. Despite all that, the city is vibrant, as they say "you just get on with it don't ya?".
It's a surprisingly easy to navigate city, not sure what I was expecting... On the last day of our stay in Christchurch, we took a drive to Lyttelton, one of the eastern suburbs effected by the quake last year. There are definitely many signs of the damages but with its people and their united efforts, I am confident the city will be rebuilt in no time.
Here is the end of our road... We flew home to Sydney, to the hustle and bustle... I can't help asking ourselves how so many New Zealanders move to Australia to live? Sure Oz is a great place but having seen what we saw in the South Island, I am not sure that I would leave that tranquility for much of anything else.
So I would end this post by saying... New Zealand, we will be back!
Part 1 of our trip ended with us chilling in the fun filled yet beautiful Queenstown... photos can't lie right?
Our next stop was Te Anau - one of our favourites! They don't call it the stunning Fiordland for nothing.
Check out our campervan site, right opposite Lake Te Anau! Can life get any better than this?!
| yeah, a little juvenile but can you blame us for laughing at this sign? heehee heehee |
Oh Doubtful Sound... we took a day trip with Doubtful Sound Cruise. We cannot say enough good things about the crew and how much fun we had that day... It also happened to be our 13th wedding anniversary - we couldn't ask for a better way to spend the special day!
We did see two Fiordland Crested Penguins but my camera couldn't pick them up clearly. They were very cute, I just have to make sure that image stays in my memory bank forever!
After beautiful Doubtful Sound, we took a drive down south towards Invercargill. Aside from being the home of the inspirational Burt Munro, the world's fastest Indian, Invercargill is a busy little town. The first place we saw with more than two sets of traffic lights since Nelson.
Back to Mr Munro, we visited the local museum as well as the exhibition located in the local hardware store, E Hayes & Sons on the main street of Invercargill. I think Terry was in heaven, a hardware store AND a legendary bikes museum!
After Invercargill, our next stop was somewhere between there and Dunedin...By this time, my poor husband had got himself the dreaded man-flu... he battled on like a trooper but I insisted that we stopped in between.
We pulled up at a place called Owaka. Whilst we didn't see any, there is a sea lions colony in the area and signs all over on the beach behind the camp site we stayed. It was a windy night so I suspected that they were hiding!
The next day we went to Nugget Point and Cannibal Bay. I put them in the wrong spot on my map about as they are actually between Owaka and Dunedin. The views are amazing!! and there were fur seals lazing around!
On the way to Dunedin, we went through a little town called Milton, about 40 minutes drive south.
I remembered reading this blog post by Kiwiyarns Knits about a woollen mill in Milton... well even I am amazed at the type of information my brain retains :) Haha! Not on the main drag, no worries, a quick search on my iPhone (oh 3G connection, how I love you!), we quickly got a map and direction.
Judging by the smile on my face there, I was like a kid in a toy store. Even my man-flu ridden darling husband couldn't help but smiled at my giddiness. We pulled up onto the street and the big Factory Shop sign is blinking at me (well not really blinking but in my minds eye, all the letters were flashing!). I didn't take any photos in the shop but there is a cool museum in an adjoining room and I was happily snapping away. Oh yes the bags I was carrying outside of the door... more of that in the next post as after all this is a crafty blog and a discovery like this deserves its own post!
We did visit Dunedin and the Otago Peninsula and whilst they are cool places, we came across cooler places, like Nugget Point and Cannibal Bay on the Catlins Coast above. Then we came across Shag Point. Whoa, we thought Nugget Point and Cannibal Bay were cool, Shag Point is wow wow wow! We saw so many fur seals and they were right there, in front of us! oh and don't forget the sheep! I never get enough of those sheep dotted rolling green hills!
Yeah it was ah, abit chilly... freezing and windy actually!
Next stop is Oamaru! A really charming historical town and the Steampunk capital of NZ! We fell in love with this place... Ducks quacking by the door...
We happened upon their annual Christmas parade - what a fun event! Yeah I am a city sheep...
Ah yes I also found myself in a yarn store, The Oamaru Textile Emporium... How could you not check it out? It's not just a store, it's an emporium! ok I admit it, it's something else I remembered reading from the Kiwiyarns blog... The lovely ladies (Helen on the left and I am so ashamed, I forget the other lady's name!) were braiding a rug using wool blankets! I told me that this is actually an old American tradition. I googled this after chatting with them and what a wonderful idea. More about this in another post but Oamaru, I am coming back to visit!
After being charmed by Oamaru, we made our way to Christchurch. Words can't describe this amazing city and its people's resilience. We took a tour into the red zone and we couldn't help having that lump in our throat feeling. Despite all that, the city is vibrant, as they say "you just get on with it don't ya?".
It's a surprisingly easy to navigate city, not sure what I was expecting... On the last day of our stay in Christchurch, we took a drive to Lyttelton, one of the eastern suburbs effected by the quake last year. There are definitely many signs of the damages but with its people and their united efforts, I am confident the city will be rebuilt in no time.
Here is the end of our road... We flew home to Sydney, to the hustle and bustle... I can't help asking ourselves how so many New Zealanders move to Australia to live? Sure Oz is a great place but having seen what we saw in the South Island, I am not sure that I would leave that tranquility for much of anything else.
So I would end this post by saying... New Zealand, we will be back!
Labels:
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Holiday
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Campervan Adventure - New Zealand South Island (Part 1)
We have been back from our holiday in New Zealand (NZ) for almost two weeks now but my mind keeps wandering back there... since we have been back, we have been busy with work and Christmas festivities that I hadn't had the time to go through our photos until now.
There were over 270 photos and the truth is none of them really did the place justice. For one I only used my iPhone4 and sometimes Terry's iPhone4S so the quality aren't the best... anyway they keep the moments last longer and I keep looking at them over and over again!
I made up a summary of each place using an iPhone app called PicFrame. I love this app!
We were away for 16 days, starting from flying into Wellington and ending at Christchurch. We covered a lot of ground (and seas) so I will split my post into 2 parts.
This is Part 1 - first week of our trip...
Wellington was in the midst of Hobbit frenzy! The day we arrived the people of Wellington was starting their preparation for the premiere in around 10 days time and Gandalf was just being raised onto the front of the Embassy Theatre as our airport to city bus went pass. This certainly wasn't the only highlight as Wellington has a lot to offer but definitely memorable!
As this was the first two days of our holiday, we treated ourselves some celebratory drinks!
| The InterIslander Ferry journey across from Wellington to Picton in the South Island was a major highlight and a great introductory to what NZ has on offer! |
We picked up our campervan from Road Abode campervan after we arrived at Picton. Check them out, the service we received has been fantastic and they will definitely be our first choice for the next trip (yep already dreaming about the next trip!)
From Picton, we went to Blenheim to visit Terry's cousin and her family. We ought to factor in more time to spend with them in the next trip, they have the cutest children!
While in Blenheim, we visited the Omaka Aviation Heritage Centre. Even their coffee comes with an aeroplane lolly!
The next day we set off to Punakaiki via Nelson
Probably not very clear but the tree in front of this van there in downtown Greymouth has been yarn bomb!
We nearly made it to the glacier but the weather turned bad and our heli-hike got cancelled 3 times! We got so close one time where we were all geared up waiting at the heli pad but got told that the weather was too bad. Well, no one can control weather so reluctantly we had to move on to the next stop... We took a walk to the glacier face though and it was an amazing experience in its own right.
The famous whitebait sandwich at the Cray Port in Jackson Bay was worth the trip. Located 48km from the Haast Junction, this little seaside port is picturesque and full of early settlement history.
Queenstown - has something for everyone! We loved Queenstown although we didn't get into all the adrenaline activities the place has to offer, we found the atmosphere inviting. A great place to chill out and enjoy the beautiful scenery.
That's the end of the first half of our trip... Part 2 will follow in the next post!
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