countryside · crafts & knitting · winter

Emerging

February is always the time when I feel like I’m emerging from hibernation. Not that I have slept all of January of course, though the temptation was certainly there. I have been busily knitting away and have put together the beginnings of a couple of new patterns. They still need editing, photographing, laying out and testing so it will be a while before they are ready but they will be coming soonish and when they’re a little further along I might give a sneak peek. I’ve also been out and about with my camera a bit, enjoying the quiet of the winter countryside, though never venturing too far from the pull and comfort of home.

Winter this year has been mild, with only a few frosty January mornings. I do love how the frost transforms the dull coloured twigginess of the winter landscape, so couldn’t resist heading out to take some pictures before scurrying back home to curl up with my knitting again.

In the last week there has been a sense of change in the air, especially at daybreak, which throughout December and January has been a silent affair. But now that February is here the dawn chorus is gaining new voices each day, with small birds singing out their territorial boundaries from first light. Spring is waiting in the wings, ready to burst forth with colour and fragrance and celebration of warming and lengthening days. I don’t know about you, but I feel very ready for it.

 

crafts & knitting · general stuff · winter

quiet winter days

โ€œWinter is the time for comfort, for good food and warmth, for the touch of a friendly hand and for a talk beside the fire: it is the time for home.โ€
โ€•ย Edith Sitwell

This quote chimes well with my idea of a perfect January – quiet days, spent gently and slowly. Of course life often has other ideas and usually throws up unexpected things to get in the way of peace and relaxation, but there have been some calm and relaxing moments in my January so far…

  • peaceful moments watching the skies at sunrise whilst sipping the first cup of tea of the day, January has the best sunrises,
  • calm moments spent reading and planning for the year ahead, I’m finding these books really helpful – ‘Do Pause’ and ‘Do Breathe’ books from the Do Book Company
  • some weekend morning gentle-paced knitting, accompanied by tea and toast and warm blankets and Volume 3 of Shetland Wool Adventures which is a lovely read,
  • and lots of quiet walks in the countryside, which is currently resting quietly under a wintry sparkle of frost.

 

I hope the new year so far has been kind to you and that you’re finding comfort and calm in some of your favourite things this month too, J x

 

countryside · crafts & knitting · food and Drink · winter

January: snow, mists and mizzle

 

Hello again, I hope you’re well.

Sorry I’ve not been around – I’ve spent most of January in virtual hibernation and am feeling better for the little holiday from my usual daily routines and self-imposed working conditions ๐Ÿ˜‰

I’m grateful that Toby has been able to return to school (he attends a severe learning difficulty school and they’ve been wonderful at keeping the pupils safe and providing essential routines to underpin the week) and without him to constantly supervise, my January weekdays have been quiet, unhurried and peaceful. There’s a feeling of stillness and sanctuary in our home and I’ve not really wanted to be anywhere else other than right here, which I am very grateful for since we are still in lockdown here in the UK and so cannot go anywhere anyway.

This time of year is usually melancholy, even in the best of years, but it’s feeling more so this year, and like many others I’ve never felt such a need to keep things simple, small and peaceful and to shut out the goings on in the news as much as is possible. Here in my little sanctuary of homeliness I’ve been listening to music, watching films and have given in to a growing and deep sense of nostalgia and bought a copy of The Wind in the Willows. Curling up under a blanket and reading myself into a world of whimsy and delight, far away from the fear and poison-filled news feeds has been a favourite part of my January days, especially on the few days when it has snowed here.

And of course there’s been knitting, though of the gentle, meandering kind rather than the focussed intensity of pattern writing. I’ve started projects, put them to one side and started another: lots and lots of animal heads (mostly knitted in Camarose Snefnug which is a new favourite); some mittens; a pair of socks and some crochet coasters – I pick each project up as the mood takes me and free my mind of any sense of deadline or purpose, and instead just enjoy the process of gentle making.

Toby and I are still enjoying our weekend wood walks, though we’re choosing to walk at dusk as it’s much quieter than earlier in the day when there are lots of famillies making noise and leaving litter and disturbing the peaceful air that we seek there. And I’ve been enjoying walking with my camera in the week, when I can take time to notice and observe the rhythm of nature. Most days I head out early, just after Toby goes off on the school bus and then the thought of breakfast waiting for me when I return makes me walk faster and I’m able to kid myself that this little extra speed balances out the calories in a buttermilk pancake topped with coconut yoghurt, blueberries and maple syrup ๐Ÿ™‚

The woods are at their least enchanting at this time of year: the pathways clagged and clumped with mud and their margins tangled with soggy, dead bracken and mulching leaves; the overhead branches brown and bare and stark against the sky or shrouded in mists. There’s little of colour to enliven the scene, but knowing that spring flowers are busy under the earth, no longer dormant, but steadily and surely pushing up shoots from fat underground bulbs is a hopeful thought and there’s comfort in the wheel of the year inexorably turning.

As January draws to a close, I’m starting to focus on pattern writing again and have lots of ideas to shepherd into being. I’ll be back here on a more regular basis too, though long absences do interupt the rythym so I hope you’ll bear with me while I find my blogging feet again.

I hope that you’re doing OK and keeping well, I’ll leave you now with the quote that I’ve written at the start of my 2021 diary in the hope it will guide my thoughts over the coming year:

“If it’s out of your hands, it deserves freedom from your mind too” Ivan Nuru