Monday, May 24, 2010

I may actually be over-fibered.....

Last weekend I was one of the spinners on a sheep-to-shawl team at the Waynesburg Sheep and Fiber Festival in Waynesburg, PA (for photos of the 3 shawls, see Wild Rose Farm's blog, here--that's me in the sunglasses!). And then I carded lots of batts this week, photographed them and should get them in the shop this coming week. And spun some yarn. And knitted some hats. And knitted on my brown tweed sweater, ripped it out, knitted it again, and must rip out again because I'm math-challenged and figured the raglan decreases incorrectly. And today I headed to Stramba Alpaca Farm because.....I'd never been to an alpaca shearing and wanted to see what's up with that (she says innocently). Been a while since I assisted at sheep shearing and wanted to see the difference. Folks, it's more work than sheep! Sheep seem to be more accepting of having their hair removed. They have their hooves trimmed and usually get a protective shot of meds. Assistants grab the sheep for the shearer, whisk away the fleece (which sticks together as that's just the nature of sheep fleece), take it to a skirting table and pull away the undesirable bits. Alpacas don't like the whole idea of laying still and having shears run over them and some of them yell about it--loudly and unendingly. The assistants grab the fiber in 3 (and sometimes more depending on the farm) different batches--the blanket, the neck fiber and the trash. Their fiber drifts everywhere, and must be swept away before the next animal comes in. Sometimes there are other things that need to be swept away. It's tiring work and requires lots of helpers. By the time we were down to the last 4-5 alpacas, when I was asked to hold the animals head I had to refuse because I was just too tired to do the job well and didn't want to accidentally hurt the animal. I think I clogged the shower drain with the junk adhering to me. My feet hurt and I've had ice on them for several hours tonight. I don't want to card, spin or knit tonight cause I've seen (and picked off the barn floor) enough fiber for today. My hat is off to shearers and their assistants, because they will get up tomorrow and do it all over again. You guys rock!

4 comments:

Doris Sturm said...

Well, helllooooo....nice to "see" ou again! I missed you!

You know, reading your story reminded me of another friend who has alpacas and posted on her blog about her experience. She's a really nice lady named Jess. Her and her husband are beekeepers too.

Here's the link to her blog. You may already know her, but you can tell her Doris sent you ;-)

http://beneficialbee.blogspot.com/2010/05/shorn-nuff.html

It's good to hear from you again. Have a wonderful day!
Doris :-)

RMK said...

Fiesty -
Great to hear that you were at the Waynesburg Sheep & Fiber Festival .... it's a lot of work to get teams together for sheep to shawl and we're thrilled to have everyone there! Next year (because I know that there will be a next year) stop in & say hello!

Feisty said...

RMK, I wanted to stop in and say Hi but was waylaid by a volunteer (along with 2 other S2S ladies) to go through the buildings while showing the shawls. It just got crazy right before the auction and I didn't have time. Still need to wash/spin that Rambouillet lambs fleece I bought 2 years ago....

Annie said...

Good you said who you were in that picture! I wouldn't have recognised you.
I can imagine you were tired after a day of alpaca-shearing!