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Here at 20 Acres and No Sheep, we love our music. Music of all varieties.
We also love electronics.
For years, first thing in the morning while showering and getting ready, we've been listening to public radio: The Morning Show with Dale Connelly and Jim Ed Poole.
Bad news. After 25 years on the air, Thursday December 11 was the final show. Jim Ed retired.
So, now what?
Good news! Dale's going to have a morning show on the new Radio Heartland. (This is so cool - go have a look at the amazing playlist!)
Bad news! It's only streaming internet or HD radio.
Good news! We ordered an HD radio for the bathroom, and it arrived just in time!
We tuned in this morning. love it!
HD radio is way nifty. Check out the digital notification of what song is playing.
I sense we'll be investing in HD tuners for the stereos in the rest of the house!
Two below zero this morning.
Girl of the House is really bundled up for the bus.

But the sunrise is amazing.
While I did get some knitting and a bit of dyeing accomplished on Sunday, the majority of my fiber fun was in repair.
I picked up this rug in 1991 at an auction. It's a lovely old wool rag rug, braided and sewn together.
It's been in a variety of rooms over the years. It currently lives in the family room, near the entry door.
It's been pulling apart in a number of places. I've kept putting off the repairs, and more holes kept appearing.
Sunday was repair day.
It turned out to have thirteen places it needed to be sewn back together.
I hunched over on the floor and stitched 'em all back together. (Yay for naprosyn! I'm not as flexible as I used to be.)
Looks better now, doesn't it?
(Don't ask how many times I stabbed myself with the big old needle!)
Yesterday, we made it to "Christmas at Luther". Last year we were snowed in, and unable to go.
No photos were allowed. TPT2 from St. Paul was there filming the concert for broadcast on PBS. (You can see it on your local PBS station, beginning Dec. 22 - check for local listings)
It was a marvelous concert, aurally and visually. Symphony, band, six choirs and a handbell group.
Ben is in the Collegiate choir.

So, what do they wear under their choir robes?
If you are a reading addict, you strap a book to your back with an ace wrap.
Then you are always ready for any downtime!

Four and a half hours of driving time, and two hours of concert gives plenty of knitting time.
The only simple stockinette (good for knitting in the dark) project in the works, is Paul's Retrofit sweater.
I finished the second sleeve, and began the body (for the second time).
I'm just reknitting right from the old. No point in spending time raveling and reballing! That last little bit of old sleeve is rapidly disappearing.
I've managed to tear myself away from the Kauni cardigan and start some holiday knitting.
A surprise project, to be named later.
I am still knitting on the Kauni.

I can't wait for the next row, to see how the colors will look.
So I end up "After this row I'll stop. OK, after this row I'll stop. Well, maybe one more."

Girl of the House went to town last evening for Northfield's Winter Walk, our big winter to-do. Downtown was all decorated, lots of special events, even a parade. It's mostly a shopping extravaganza. (We dropped her off, sneaking the back way into town. Don't like the crowds. And, man, it was cold!)
Her middle school choir walked in the parade, singing carols. After the parade, they broke into small groups, walking about town, caroling.
As the days shorten, it's darker and darker when I leave work.
When I cross the bridge at the bottom of the hill, I know I'm almost home.
Many days I take my surroundings for granted in the rush to be in the next place.
It's better when I take a deep breath, relax, and really see where I am.
This is a good place to be.

then I'll start that holiday knitting...
The Kauni yarn was calling, whispering to me, luring me to it.

Well, it couldn't hurt to knit a little swatch, could it? That wouldn't take too much time away from holiday knitting?
(Swatch lesson learned from the Retrofit disaster.)
Oooh, that's fun! I like that!

Couldn't hurt to make the yarn into balls, could it?
It turned out that my four balls of yarn were really seven balls in disguise.
Only one ball of blue/purple/black was a complete ball. The other three balls were knotted and restarted in a different color order somewhere in the ball.
This required much more time than I anticipated - winding and rewinding.
I deserve a reward, don't you think?
Holiday knitting be damned...
I need to try this out!
Inch and a half of corrugated ribbing, and now onto the pattern. YAY!

And, by the way, I finished my carry around alpaca sox. Wore 'em to work today.
Funny, how small luxuries are so satisfying.
Spun and plied - my recent etsy.com purchases.
Brown, blue and cream is a navajo plied Blue-Face Leicester.
Green and purple is a two ply Merino.

Both were skeined on the same niddy-noddy, so they should be the same length, right?
Here you can see the bottom of the skeins, hanging to dry.

Here's the top of the skeins. Not the same, at all!
You can see that the merino has more bounciness and pulls in. It will easily stretch to the length of the BFL.
Just demonstrates the difference in the fibers.
Cool, eh?