I had decided not to go to the knitting group because it was very hot and my surgeon had reminded me to be careful. I was out very little Monday other than crossing a parking lot and chatting a few minutes, but it still knocked me down a bit.
Anyway I figured reading, making cordage, reporting on Textiles and Tea, would be about it. Then the phone rang. The contractor was planning to start work Wednesday at 8 am. This meant finishing emptying the kitchen.
So that was the afternoon committed, before Textiles and Tea, see further on.
Some of this entailed climbing up to retrieve porcelain and art pottery pieces from open shelving,just as well I got Hippolyta signed off.
Then Textiles and Tea, a wonderful presentation by Navajo (Dine) shepherd and weaver Nikyle Begay. They spoke on location from the big wool buy event on the Navajo reservation.
A saddle cinch, in the belief that horses also like to look good, so they should have beautiful accessories.
The buying event had been postponed because of wildfires, Nikyle not having planned to do the interview in the middle of the extremely busy massive wool buy. But they bravely said let's go ahead and you'll see the lines and lines of trucks bringing in Navajo Churro wool.
There's a long terrible history of the US government oppressing the indigenous people, killing their sheep, and burning their homes, to eliminate the Churro in favor of other breeds. But the Dine persisted, hid flocks of Churro in the mountains and ended up reviving the breed. As you see, from the quantities of Churro wool arriving.
Nikyle breeds all the natural colors of the sheep rather than dye them, then shears, processes, spins and weaves their wool.
They founded the Rainbow Fiber Coop, named for the rainbow of gods in their belief system as much as the orientation meaning of the symbol. But tariffs have bitten into their ability to send wool to Canada for scouring, and they have suspended coop activities for now.
Nikyle has an IG account where people can buy wool and yarn in small quantities, not the larger amounts processed by mills and scourers.
This was a significant afternoon in the presence of a person with generations of knowledge of the sheep and Dine history.
Their umbilical cord was buried, by their shepherd grandmother, in the sheep compound, as a wish that they'd make a life as a shepherd. It's a Dine observance, as a hope of directing the developing baby toward one kind of life or another. It seems to have been effective on Nikyle.
Definitely check on Nikyle Begay for an education in the wool life as well as great Navajo weaving.
Then, before the program was finished, Gary called to say my car was to be ready Wednesday, as well . Everything happening at once. So he was going to get Handsome Son or another neighbor to help retrieve it, depending on who's available.
The cleaners also wanted to come in the next couple of days, but once again I postponed them. They wouldn't be able to get in the kitchen and the living room is packed with kitchen stuff, hard to navigate let alone clean.
Never a dull moment. Again. I did in fact read a bit and make some cordage, though that wasn't as central as I'd expected.
Happy day everyone. Help me breathe!
It all happens at once!!
ReplyDeleteTextiles and Tea sounds very interesting. I wonder if the tariffs affecting the wool processing could be circumnavigated by emphasising its heritage aspect?
It sounds surprising that it had to travel so far ?
There are very few scouring facilities available to smaller producers. The one in Texas closed, and that may have been their other option. Since our present government would be delighted to eliminate anything to do with indigenous people, there's unlikely to be a tariff workaround.
DeleteThe waeving and the wool sale are something Id love to e perience in the flesh - the smell of wool the feel of the blankets. What do they use to achieve that brilliant red?
ReplyDeleteThere are a couple of red sources, oni being cochineal.
DeleteI find often that life is either feast or famine.
ReplyDeleteOnce it’s all done you can sit and admire it all
Don’t forget to stay hydrated even in an air conditioned home
Hydration is important, especially in a home whose outer wall is open!
DeleteI hope things will go smoothly now and you can soon have your home back to yourself and the way you want it.
ReplyDeleteInteresting about the Churro - what dreadful things governments implement.
Certainly governments who have invaded the territory, as the US did.
DeleteWait and wait and then everything happens at once. Sometimes a phone call is like the started run in a race. Will be so nice when they are done! :)
ReplyDeleteIt will be nice when the heat passes, too.
DeleteI hope all goes well today with the kitchen repairs. And you’re getting your wheels back too. Yay Wednesday! Stay cool, Boud.
ReplyDeleteA full day, you'd say.
DeleteNavajo weaving is so beautiful!
ReplyDeleteIt's soooo skilled and loving.
DeleteThanks for sharing about the wool behind the weavings, and how that industry has survived. I hope it can continue, as the heritage is so rich, and the weavings so beautiful. Hope by tonight all your fixings are completed.
ReplyDeleteThe Vanishing Fleece that I commented on recently also has a lot to say about the current situation in the world of wool. The house -- five days, interior wall, exterior wall, flooring, painting. It's a lot.
DeleteIsn't life just one thing after another that we will be grateful for when it's done? Surgery, house repairs...
ReplyDeleteMakes it hard to practice being in the moment.
The moments all seem jampacked!
DeleteYour life will be in upheaval for a while! Interesting information about the Navajo and the sheep and weaving. They've survived so much and now another hurdle.
ReplyDeleteMy life's been in upheaval for a while, what's a few more days..
DeleteAll small enterprises in the wool world are struggling. They've been overtaken by cheap mass production and rising costs
If you can survive through today, it looks like your heat breaks tomorrow. But with rain forecast, having an "open kitchen" may be ....interesting.
ReplyDeleteI will avert my eyes from "this entailed climbing up to retrieve porcelain and art pottery pieces". Not quite sure the surgeon included this in his signing off. But you're still in one piece, and that's what counts.
This was an excellent summary of an important-on-many-levels Textiles and Tea. Thanks for sharing.
Chris from Boise
Contractor Steve assured me the house would be closed against today and covered with a tarp. Yes, I thought you'd notice the climbing bit. I'm do much steadier now than in past years. But I rarely do it anyway.
DeleteIf you read Vanishing Fleece it will round out that summary, about the small wool trade in general.
So wonderful that the Dine managed to preserve the churro breed. So awful that they had to fight (and hide them) to do so. What a lot of work you’ve had, but your kitchen is going to be so well organized when you’re done!
ReplyDeleteThe Dine are wonderful. It's humbling to acknowledge what my forebears and people like them have done to such people.
DeleteI can't wait for an end to the hammering and drilling and shouting of Instructions back and forth. This too shall pass.
Life is so seldom without upheaval of one sort or another it seems.
ReplyDeleteThat weaving is beautiful. It would be so satisfying, not to mention time consuming, to go from sheep, to wool, to weaving. Gorgeous.
I've done the raw fleece to woven product. But I didn't breed and raise the sheep. That really is end to end.
DeleteHope the kitchen work goes smoothly and you can relax. Wishing you a more peaceful future! :)
ReplyDeleteI think I'll take August off!
DeleteWow! So much going on. Ohhh that heat. As you know, I would love to have some heat for just a bit.
ReplyDeleteMaybe for an hour or two! It's exhausting day after day with very high humidity. Tomorrow we get some relief though. Only in the 80s. That will be jacket weather!
DeleteI hope life becomes more peaceful as the kitchen is repaired. Your T and T is interesting today, lots of history.
ReplyDeleteFor more information about the wool trade now, as experienced by small producers, you might like Vanishing Fleece. Nikyle is living parts of it.
DeleteA lot of people are justifiably concerned these days about democratic backsliding, but throughout U.S. history we were hardly at our democratic best when it came to the treatment of indigenous people. Now there's efforts going on by the current administration to suppress the history and the reality of that mistreatment. All of it shameful, but maybe we shouldn't be so surprised.
ReplyDeleteYes, there's a history of terrible treatment, broken treaties, terrorism against the indigenous people. Nothing new to them.
DeleteSuch good news on the car! Yay! And cleaners soon -- you're right, when there's too much stuff for them to clean, what's the point. This heat has taken a lot of of many of us!
ReplyDeleteI'm really dragging, one thing and another.
DeleteThe Begay name is synonmous with greatness from the Dine (Navajo people).
ReplyDeleteYes, it's a classic name.
DeleteYes, there seems to never be a dull moment at The House of Boud. You can never claim to be bored because there's always something going on.
ReplyDelete