Are there truly people who are black sheep ? Isn’t that
label just a judgement we have cast upon someone who chose a different path to
the norm, or to us ? Do they see themselves as misfits and rebels ? Or as
progressive and adventurous ?
Anyway, I can’t think who to write about for this. My
brickwall people aren’t really black sheep, they are just secret keepers,
or actually too normal and not attracting attention to get themselves
documented and more easily found.
So, I’m going out of the box again, way out on a lateral
tangent with this topic. I saw something recently that said about 7% of American
adults (16.4 million !) actually thought chocolate milk came from brown cows.
Black wool comes from black sheep, white wool from white
sheep; are there actually rainbow coloured sheep out there somewhere in a
paddock I’ve not yet found ? I don’t believe so. But now that I have segued
myself to where I want to be, let’s talk about knitting.
People have been knitting for a long time, fashioning
items of clothing, working on a frame and making blankets and the like.
Soldiers knitted in the trenches and in past centuries many men knitted
alongside their womenfolk.
My Bartlett forebears were glovers & sailmakers from
Somerset. My Coopers were tailors – did they knit too ?
I remember both my grandmothers knitting and crocheting.
My mother and my aunts all knit too. Skills they all learned while young,
passed on by their mothers. I learnt to knit too although I have never been a
great producer of knitted garments. It is something I do sporadically. Scarves,
jumpers, cardigans, baby booties, bonnets, dresses and hats, blankets.
I remember my first attempts which involved either lots
of dropped stitches and holes needing to be rescued and repaired by my patient
teachers, or rows where extra stitches seemed to multiply exponentially when
they didn’t need to.
Sadly it is a skill which I haven’t successfully passed
on. I’m still working on that. Kids don’t wear knitted homespun garments now,
like they used to. Perhaps the children of hipsters and eco warriors will once
more, in the future.
Here in Australia, there seem to be woollen mills everywhere.
The wool industry is alive and well. In New Zealand it seems to have become
very artisan and expensive, sheep farming appears to be not be as common as it
was when I was younger. Dirty dairying is on the rise. (Seriously how much milk
does a tiny country need ?)
Anyways, thanks for passing on these skills to me, Mum and Nana. Maybe
one day I will be a super knitter too. Maybe I’ll start a knitting club, or
classes to teach others. Although I do remember once attempting to teach my
Brownie pack to knit and nearly tearing my hair out, so maybe not 20 students
at a time ! Perhaps I should have learned this rhyme
In through the
front door
Run around the
back
Down through the
window
And off jumps Jack.
Maybe that would have made the task clearer for them all.
Meantime, I’m off to finish a jumper I have taken over and dream about one day
when I’m feeling more settled and I can knit (and craft) to my heart’s content.
Baa baa black sheep
Have you any wool
?
Yes sir ! Yes sir
!
Three bags full.
One for my master,
one for my dame,
And one for the
little boy who lives down the lane.
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