Well. After that three-month hiatus I'll try to do some catch-up here! My life is much slower now. And I had some little hiccups recently but I'm thinking I can expect that more and more as time rolls on. I gave up on getting a painter to come paint the inside of my garage so I did it myself. Followed closely by some major sciatic nerve pain. Sigh. Lost most of March. Did the meds followed by physical therapy thing (and still doing the take-home exercises they prescribed). After that incident my right knee seems to have further deteriorated. Another sigh. I see knee-replacement surgery in my future if I want to walk much .....
Been keeping busy though with things I enjoy doing such as reading, crocheting, needlepunch and 'finally' back to rug hooking pretty regularly! Since I've moved here I've really missed hooking with kindred spirits. It's difficult to stay motivated if I don't have a group to meet with! That's just me.... There is no one I've found in this immediate area who does real rug hooking. (There is one person about an hour away but she is more of an "artist" and we just don't share the same style. I sort of feel for the people who take classes from her if they think that that style is what rug hooking is all about. I'm more of the rug-on-the-floor type of hooker. Just sayin.) And I've asked around about others who might hook, contacting the local homemakers club and also my crafty friends at knit n' crochet. Like most of us, those knitters and crocheters also dabble in other interests to some degree. Some lots more than others. And they're always interested in seeing and hearing about what's going on outside the yarn world.
Speaking of that group (called A Good Yarn), we're just starting a new project for Life Stream, crocheting 100 small baskets for their Christmas project. Last year we made 800 hats, but they've contacted other like-minded crafters in the 5-county area now so we only have to do 100 items and not 800. Shoot! We'll have that knocked out before the end of May! So I've been making little 4" diameter by 4" tall baskets.
Let me look at my photos and see what I've been doing ...
Came across this historical marker just last week as I was coming home from a shop in Ohio. Wandering the back roads again. This 1860s building is just inside Randolph county Indiana about a half mile from the state line on county road 600S. This was an old two-story brick school house called the Union Literary Institute. They took students without regard to color or sex. Classes were on the first floor and housing on the top floor. The sign says that notable attendees included Hiram Revels, the first black U.S. Senator and James S. Hinton, the first black elected to the Indiana House of Representatives. It also claims to have been a stop on the Underground Railroad. I wish someone would repair this building before it falls down! |
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