badly_knitted (
badly_knitted) wrote in
get_knitted2025-04-29 08:11 pm
Check-In Post - April 29th 2025
Hello to all members, passers-by, curious onlookers, and shy lurkers, and welcome to our regular daily check-in post. Just leave a comment below to let us know how your current projects are progressing, or even if they're not.
Checking in is NOT compulsory, check in as often or as seldom as you want, this community isn't about pressure it's about encouragement, motivation, and support. Crafting is meant to be fun, and what's more fun than sharing achievements and seeing the wonderful things everyone else is creating?
There may also occasionally be questions, but again you don't have to answer them, they're just a way of getting to know each other a bit better.
This Week's Question: Do you change crafts with the season or stick to the same crafts year round?
If anyone has any questions of their own about the community, or suggestions for tags, questions to be asked on the check-in posts, or if anyone is interested in playing check-in host for a week here on the community, which would entail putting up the daily check-in posts and responding to comments, go to the Questions & Suggestions post and leave a comment.
I now declare this Check-In OPEN!
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Don't know about easier, brambles root deep, but at least I'll be able to see what I'm doing. Got to be careful though, there are a lot of other things rooted in the area that don't want disturbing, including the gooseberries. I would like to get some fruit this year.
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There's tiny, medium, and large triangles to do and I've got 2/3, 6/6, and 0/10 respectively. I'll have to put them all together via sewing and stuff them and then sew them (again, but this time into the final shape) but yknow it's honestly impressive progress for mostly laying underneath the table and zoning the fuck out (it was cooler down there, and the humidity was super high yesterday) and only speaking via putting my hand over the table + sock puppet.
"the fuck am I doing with my life" ass paragraph, lmao. It was an enjoyable night at least!
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Everyone was amused with it at least. Whenever I popped my hand over the table to speak they'd "feed" my hand random objects, to which I'd go "hmmm crunch crunch... tastes like [insert joke}" or "Pleh! Gross!"
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Good luck with getting some planting done.
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I did get out to plant a few herbs and the first of the Johnny jump-ups! :D I may get one more round before supper.
One thing I love about spring planting the annual flowers is the color-matching. So for instance, the barrel garden has hot sunny colors while the rain garden has cool colors. Some violas and pansies are purple to white, others yellow to orange; the Johnnies are tricolors to tie them together. I've got one pot of near-black petunias in different styles plus a deep burgundy oxalis.
I may not be able to draw worth a damn, but my eye for color and my eye for composition are in perfect working order. :D
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I love the way you're working with colour. Also love the thought of near black petunias, very striking. I've always loved petunias anyway.
Yeah, I can't draw either, but I'm pretty good with colour. It's a trade off. Can't be good at everything, I guess.
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https://pics.davesgarden.com/pics/2010/09/02/LarryR/738a3b.jpg
A solid black:
https://plants.wolfhillgardencenter.com/Content/Images/Squares/L058-09.jpg
A black ruffle:
https://cdn.apartmenttherapy.info/image/upload/v1723752312/at/style/2024-08/black-petunias/black-petunias-1.jpg
And a black oxalis:
https://www.gardencentermarketing.com/_ccLib/image/plantstock/WEB/WEB-041889.jpg
So green leaves, purple-black flowers touched with yellow or white, and then the purple-black leaves. :D
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My favourite pansy was a black one, the petals looked like black velvet. I really need to grow more of those someday.
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Those are pretty popular this year, if you look around.
>>My favourite pansy was a black one, the petals looked like black velvet. I really need to grow more of those someday.<<
I've grown several varieties of red-black or purple-black pansies. They're edible and can be tossed in salads, made into syrup or jelly, etc. The black flowers created jewel-tones of deep purple to red.
https://www.food.com/recipe/black-pansy-syrup-370080
https://unrulygardening.com/black-pansy-jelly/
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Yeah, but the flowers only last a day or few each, and they can be made into so many beautiful things! I made a flower salad once with a box of spring greens mix, about a cup of herbs, and a cup or two of edible flowers. Spectacular.
Just grow extra if you want to eat them.
>>The one I grew was Black Beauty, so I'd say that was a purple-black. <<
Yeah, I've had that one. I love it.
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Yeah, limited space here, lol! I don't have acres to play with.
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2) Consider vertical gardening. I bought stackable pots to make a couple of towers this year, because I want to try that with wild strawberries.
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Have you tried beneficial nematodes? They kill weevil larvae.
Another possibility, if your problem focuses strongly on pots, would be using disposable pots -- the fiber ones should be flammable or compostable in hot compost (which gets hot enough to kill pests).
Sometimes nature will step in. I used to have lots of junebugs, and for a while, Japanese beetles would eat everything in sight. But then one year some blue-winged wasps showed up, along with other parasitic wasps. They lay their eggs on the larvae of scarab beetles. Since then, the population of adult junebugs and Japanese beetles has plummeted. \o/ So I've planted more of the sedums and garlic chives that the wasps like.
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The next year I got blue-winged wasps, who greatly reduced all the scarab-type beetles. :D
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Gaia and I have been gardening together for decades. It's a bit chaotic, but I enjoy it.
Anyhow, you name your pest and then tell its predators that there is a bounty of prey for them to eat, and invite them to come feast. Weevil larvae may be eaten by underground and detritivore predators such as centipedes, some spiders, and nematodes; adults are food for more spiders, predatory beetles, amphibians, lizards, and some birds.
One thing that helps with my garden is that I don't spray everything to death and I have lots of habitat. So the insects usually eat each other more than eating my fruit. I only have to deal with a few challenges. I've seen raspberry plants absolutely swarming with bugs and the berries were fine.
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The native birds in my area have changed completely since I was a kid. Species that used to be abundant have vanished, and species I never saw as a kid are now everywhere.
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Awesome.
>> especially hedgehogs which are gradually making a comeback in my are after vanishing for almost 20 years<<
Given how they like to root around, they might help against the weevils. I've seen a campaign to install hedgehog doors in fences around yards.
>>The native birds in my area have changed completely since I was a kid. Species that used to be abundant have vanished, and species I never saw as a kid are now everywhere.<<
There's been turnover here in central Illinois too. But today I saw two red-headed woodpeckers, that I haven't seen in years, although they used to be common.
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WE used to have thrushes, but the cats finished those off. House sparrows, starlings, greenfinches... all disappeared. Getting a few starlings back now, and the odd sparrow, but we get coal tits and long tailed tits, black caps, goldfinches, the occasional goldcrest, which are so tiny, and jackdaws. There are a lot of other bird species too, those are just the relative newcomers.
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Here is a sample hedgehog door that can be cut out of metal, wood, etc. for modifying fences or other barriers. Sized for hedgehogs, it's too small for most other creatures except maybe very young kittens or puppies -- and if you have those, you could just put a brick over it for a few weeks until they get bigger. Hedgehog doors help by making easier for them to roam across many yards in search of food and mates.
And some plans for hedgehog homes:
Above ground:
https://www.tcv.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/TCV-How-to-make-a-hedgehog-home-compressed.pdf
Buried:
https://www.hedgehogstreet.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/data/HEDGEHOGHOME_2014.pdf
An all-purpose hibernaculum can serve hedgehogs as well as reptiles and amphibians, so long as the entrance pipes and den spaces are large enough for them to enter. Just use the same dimensions that hedgehog doors have.
https://shetlandcommunitywildlife.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/scwg_hibernaculum_final.pdf
>>WE used to have thrushes, but the cats finished those off. House sparrows, starlings, greenfinches... all disappeared.<<
Interestingly, I find that signs of predation almost always indicate invasive species of birds such as house sparrows or starlings. It's rare to see the remains of native songbirds. Based on my observations, songbirds are wary creatures, whereas sparrows and starlings are bold -- it may get them more food, but it makes them more vulnerable to anything looking for a feathered meal. I suspect habitat changes may account for more of the drift in observed bird species.
I saw the two red-headed woodpeckers again today. I'm so hoping they stick around for the breeding season!
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The problem with the thrushes were that they stay on the ground when they fledge, making them easy prey for cats despite good visual camouflage. If the young don't survive, there goes the species. The house sparrows have gone because people are having new roofs on their houses that don't leave a way in for them. The same is true for swifts. So many used to nest under the eaves of local houses, but now there's nowhere for them to nest. I haven't heard a single swift this year. They used to fill the sky throughout summer. I miss them.
Glad your woodpeckers are sticking around!
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Yeah, mourning doves here spend a lot of time on the ground and are more likely to get eaten.
>>The house sparrows have gone because people are having new roofs on their houses that don't leave a way in for them. The same is true for swifts.<<
Here are there loads of house sparrows. We used to have lots of barn owls and barn swallows, but as you said, changes in architecture have been hard on them. However, last year I saw lots of purple martins for the first time, and they're back this year. One yard had like 3 houses, all full. Before this, I would see plenty of houses but never martins. So I'm happy to see them.
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At least some species are flourishing.
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My mum and dad recently got back from a holiday where they found some gorgeous region-themed hand-dyed wool so they bought it for me!! Except when I tried to unspool the hank (I have done this... 3 times? 2??) the cut end seemed all tangled through it... I should have stopped there and worked really hard to keep it from tangling but. I did not. And now it is. very very very tangled. :')))
I've spent the last couple of days slooooowly untangling but oh my god. one part is just so MATTED I really don't know what I'll do...... I don't understand how it got so tangled so quickly??? RIP my life. but I will PERSEVERE and repeatedly google slash ask Claude for tips (since I've found it SUPER helpful in the past for specific questions) and maybe someday I will be able to use it the way I wanted to :')))
(oh I'm a beginner-ish crocheter btw!! I have made a couple of simple things and was intending to use this yarn for a tablet case thingy :) )
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Everyone has to start somewhere with each craft. Your plan for your yarn sounds great. =D
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You're powering ahead and planning so many projects! Good luck with getting them all done by the various deadlines.