Morris Minor

Nice article in the Telegraph: Classic Morris Minor.

Here's a good test of your personality: do you have a weakness for the Morris Minor? Because it's mighty hard to warm to anybody who doesn't harbour a sneaking affection for this darling of a car. It's one of those ageing plodders you might consider a bit of a duffer yet remains a national treasure. Like Shirley Williams, say, or Emile Heskey. True, you could complete the crossword and enjoy an afternoon snooze by the time the old lump hit fifty (28.6 seconds). But if burning off wide boys at the lights is your thing then such a tweed-skirted old girl is probably not for you.

Hubby had a 1960s Morris Minor Saloon when we started dating. It was a green hard top with a starting handle, a speedometer that went up to 80mph, and white wall tyres. We changed the fuel pump on the front garden of my second year student house because it kept sticking. The engine would cut out, you'd drift to the side of the road, pop the bonnet and whack the fuel pump with a pair of heavy pliers, and be on your merry way until it stuck again.

There was an art to starting it with the handle. The battery leaked charge in the cold and damp weather and one morning in Reading it wouldn't start. You have to hold the handle so that it won't break your thumbs with the kick back when the engine catches, shove it round until the engine fires, while the driver waits to stamp on the accelerator to make sure it keeps running.

It was heated by a copper pipe that would recirculate some of the cooling fluid from the engine through the passenger compartment. You had to turn the dial to a precise angle I never found to let the hot water through, and even then it would barely take the edge off the cold. You could hear it coming a quarter mile away. Literally. When you changed down gears from fourth to third, the engine let out this elongated parp noise that sounded like the exhaust system had intestinal problems.

But the thing had style! It broke down outside Salisbury just after passing Stonehenge, and three strangers stopped to offer advice while we were waiting for the Automobile Association to turn up with a spare part. And since it used the Austin A series engine, which wasn't updated until the Austin Rover K series engine for the new Minis in 1991, there were plenty of parts.

We finally had to sell it. It was cruising up to a £500 MOT test (yearly safety test), which was more than the car was worth. Putting Hubby's guitar in the back doubled the value of the car. The Rover garage had signs all over it, "Guaranteed £1000 Trade-In!" The sales manager said if the car got onto the forecourt under its own steam, they'd give us the trade-in. We drove off with a G reg Rover Metro (built in 1989) that lasted us until we left the country in 1998. And it had the same Austin A series engine as the dear old Moggy...

Posted in Personal | 2 Comments

Sports injury

I never thought I'd have a "sports injury." At primary school, they made me take my glasses off for Physical Education lessons, so I could never see what I was doing. Didn't much like team sports in high school, except field hockey. I sprained both ankles badly as a small child so I always had to watch out for them, and I find repetitions in the gym tedious. I don't have the build to be tall, willowy, and stick-thin, but curvy, fit, and kick-ass strong are reachable goals.

I met Jim at the St Louis NaNoWriMo write-ins. It took a few years listening to him talk about karate before I asked if an unfit, overweight thirty-something could start karate without being laughed at. "Go to the Kirkwood Tracy's, and ask for Karen," he said. She was there when I walked through the door, we chatted and I came back for my free lesson, then for the four lesson introduction course, then a five month contract, and I was hooked, working out was fun! Got my orange belt, then my purple, started sparring class, and I'm most of the way through my blue belt material.

Several weeks ago, I did a spinning wheel kick, something I've done hundreds of times before. This time I did it wrong, resulting in a sprained iliotibial band, and a torn meniscus. I've never had a knee injury before and it freaked me out enough to see a sports medicine doctor. While I can still do a slow, low impact version of my private karate lessons, I can't go to group class or sparring class until I get cleared by the physical therapy torturer lady. I miss karate terribly, the workout, the sparring, and the people. I'm actually more tired when I don't have that extra three hours of intense activity in my schedule.

The knee seems to be doing better, I'm hoping it will heal without surgery for the meniscus. My reward for feeling better is more repeats of the PT exercises, and new inventive tortures at my PT sessions. I want to get back to karate.

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Lessons Learned

According to the StrengthsFinder 2.0 test, one of my personality traits is the Learner. I Must Learn New Stuff. Most of the things I knit contain some sort of challenge or modification to the pattern. I'm on a lace knitting and beaded knitting kick for a while. Not sure if I'll wear any of this stuff, but it's about the learning as much as the finished product. I am also learning to like ruffles, and pink, and bright turquoise, because it turns out I look good in them, though probably not all three at once.

Started a Medusa Cascade shawl (Ravelry link), which is a non-triangular shawlette with a ruffled edge made from one skein of sock yarn. I changed it to have a three stitch border instead of one, no garter and stocking stitch stripes, and I'm adding beads. In Doctor Who, the Medusa Cascade is the place Davros attempts to destroy the universe and fails, it's in the two-parter at the end of season 3. (NB: I really, really didn't like those episodes, it felt to me like RTD consciously trying to wreck everything on his way out. So glad Moffat is in charge now!)

I'm using royal purple Malabrigo Sock yarn for the first and last time. Winding the tangled mess of a skein was no fun at all, requiring hand winding, manual untangling, and picking it out of the teeth of the ball-winder. Even wound up there are weird loops drooling off the bottom of the ball. I'm not getting this stuff again, this is the worst skein tangle I've ever encountered. The yarn is only lightly plied and I've seen several Ravelry comments about it not wearing well, so I wouldn't use it for socks.

Medusa Cascade shawl.

Got some Miss Babs Yet yarn, a merino/silk heavy lace weight, and some beads from Earthfaire, to make Little Leaves (Ravelry link), which is a crescent-shaped shawl. I'm going to try something prevent curling on the top edge (moss stitch or ribbing), and a new stretchy cast-on method. The yarn colour is Roasted Pumpkin, the beads are 6/0 silver-lined dark gold AB. Yarn looks more like fingering weight than lace weight to me, but I love the warm colour.

Miss Babs Yet

Another thing I learned recently was that the Travelling Woman shawl pattern (Ravelry link) and the Blue Moon Fiber Arts sport weight yarn I tried to use for it are a bad match, at least for me. Didn't feel right, didn't look right, hurt my hands, frogged the lot. Sometimes you learn when to give up gracefully.

Posted in Knitting | 2 Comments

Tweets for June 1st to June 15th

  • The cat fell in the bath, lost her footing trying to grab a drink, water on 3 walls and all over the floor, while I was IN THE BATH.
  • Want to go to the Zombie workout class at http://zombiefit.org Strength training AND Parkour!
  • Physical therapy for a few weeks, Advil, and no sparring or karate group class. Bloody stupid knee.
  • Applied for our US passports today! Final step in a ten year process.
  • Have learned stuff about knee anatomy I did not wish to know, including what I tore and what I merely sprained the heck out of.
  • People that flunked physical therapy school started the Spanish Inquisition, they still wanted to hurt people but weren't qualified enough.
  • I'm torn, England & USA in same group for World Cup, want England to reach quarter or semi, but also want USA to not suck at real football.
Posted in Twitter | 1 Comment

FO: The Secret Thing

The trouble with working on a secret project is that you can't talk about it or post photos of it. It's a black hole until it's done and delivered. The only thing you can do is post a blank Ravelry project to taunt the recipient with its progress, which is darned good fun.

Secret Thing

Pattern: 198yds of Heaven, modified (Ravelry link)
Yarn: Classic Elite Four Seasons (70% cotton, 30% wool, 100% discontinued)
Needles: US8 circular
Duration: May 22nd to May 28th
Ravelry project: Secret Thing

This was made for a Ravelry swap and sent to San Antonio TX, so it had to work for hot weather. I've never done lace in worsted weight before, never in a cotton blend, and never made an all-over lace shawl, so this was a good experience. Did the joins by knitting with both strands for a few stitches and it worked really well. It knit up much faster than I was expecting, six days start to finish.

Made some modifications because I can't follow instructions. I did an extra repeat of the lace pattern before starting the border, changed the border to preserve the purled columns, and improvised the points. Started the third ball of yarn the row before the border and made it through 8 rows before casting off.

The shawlette called for the maiden voyage of my blocking wires, and I love them! The wires made it easy, two across the top and two down the spine, with pins to pull out the points. Blocked it as viciously as I could, left it two days to dry, and it came out perfect. The finished wingspan is 22 inches, and it's 22 inches down the spine. Symmetry makes me happy.

Posted in Knitting | 1 Comment

FO: Hot Pink Butternut

Picked up a skein of shocking pink lace weight yarn in the Weaving Department a while ago and it seemed perfect for Butternut. You're supposed to do 15 repeats, I stopped at 19.5 thanks to a very late knee doctor, and that was three repeats past the point of "if this scarf doesn't end soon I'll have to chew my own arm off."

Hot Pink Butternut.

Pattern: Butternut from knitspot (Ravelry link)
Yarn: Malabrigo Lace in Molly 39
Needles: US3 Blackthorn dpns
Duration: April 25th to June 4th
Ravelry project: Hot Pink Butternut

The yarn looks and feels very fragile to me, with serious variation in thickness. One section plumped all the way up to bulky weight, which did not endear me, other sections were cobweb weight. It snaps easily when you pull it by hand and some people on Ravelry say it will pill with wear. I like the subtle colour variation. Pink is not normally my colour, especially this pink, but it works when it's all grey and damp outside.

The pattern is easy to read once you get a few rows in and easy to pick up where you left off. It looks more complicated than it is, I've got a lot of compliments on the scarf-in-progress. Butternut is my second knitspot pattern and both have been good to work from.

Decided to block this with pins, the edges look better wavy rather than straight and I didn't trust the yarn to hold up to having wires shoved through it, however delicately the shoving occurred.

(ETA: changed the photo to a post-blocking shot.)

Posted in Knitting | 3 Comments

Summer of Lace

Finished a Secret Thing for my Ravelry swap partner, but I haven't mailed it yet, so no photos or details. I want her to be the first one to see it, besides Hubby. It knit up fast and was a welcome break from the endless Butternut scarf, which is fifteen repeats in and still not done.

To distract me from the endless scarf, I found a pile of projects I want to work on, several I already have the yarn for:

I feel a summer of lace coming on, and hang that second sock from March...

Posted in Knitting | 1 Comment

Tweets for May 16th to May 31st

  • There is something deeply addictive about mail tracking websites when you're waiting for a parcel.
  • Knitting on needles made from stealth bomber material is curiously faster than on wooden needles, and infinitely geekier.
  • Yellow Lamborghini in the parking lot at work, right next to my car. Guess it wanted to park next to a car that can really move...
  • Link "Rule #4 for the woman who gets a black eye in karate class: Next time, keep your guard up. You want to get killed?"
  • Will never look at a pencil the same way again after Sundays self defence seminar
  • Making the transition from flats to 3in heels, feels like learning to walk all over again.
  • Blocking wires ROCK, no way am I ever going back to all pins! Shawl grew 50% and it was effortless, and straight.
  • People on the phone in the bathroom: hang up and pee! And wash your hands this time...
  • Packing a dangerous pair of 38s at the renfaire #icanhascorset #myeyesareuphere
Posted in Twitter | 1 Comment

Slow going

My Butternut scarf looks exactly the same but longer, twelve of eighteen repeats are complete. The pattern says to do fifteen repeats, but I have extra yarn. The only difference is I moved it to a set of Blackthorn needles, double points made from the material used for the outer skin of the Blackbird Stealth Jet. The needles are very strong, properly pointy, slick but not slippery, and they whisper when they rub together. It's fast knitting with these things. They're not cheap, but I like them.

I'm spinning the third bobbin of Falklands wool for a 3 ply yarn. Spinning and watching episodes of Merlin after work. If this comes out as a decent length of sport weight yarn, I'll be very happy. It's deep ruby red and lovely to spin.

Posted in Knitting, Spinning | 3 Comments

Tweets for May 1st to 15th

  • Disturbed by partial spider web INSIDE my car, wasn't there when I parked this morning. Where is the spider now?
  • Bugger. No clear majority government for the UK.
  • When the party with the LEAST votes decides who forms the UK Government, something went badly wrong with the process.
  • Silly me, I thought if the Post Office told me to collect my parcel at 9am, they'd actually be, you know, OPEN at 9am.
  • The trouble with knitting a lace scarf is it goes back and forth forever with no shaping and you're still less than halfway through.
  • We can has elected Prime Minister now? Enough Lib Dem drama already! Someone tell Clegg to grow up...
Posted in Twitter | 4 Comments