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Tuesday 19 July 2022

Post 440 Air waves of various kinds.


Around 3.30 on Friday I had just come inside after sitting on my front balcony in the sun for half an hour, when I heard the sound of bagpipes - loud enough for me to hear the tune through my double glazed windows. When I investigated, the sound was very loud but the piper hard to find, standing under a tree, difficult to see from any position on my balcony. I love bagpipes and the piper was good. This was the best I could do with my phone so I rushed for my DSLR.









The result wasn't much better. After 5 tunes she left walking with a friend towards Carrington St. Yes, a female piper appeared like a goddess through the trees,  laughing with a friend, and, with a cyclist who had been an admiring audience, played beautifully for about 10 minutes before exiting stage right.  A bit of magic on a cold Friday afternoon.

Wednesday's World Embroidery Study Group went smoothly. There were 10 of us there and Barbara went through her presentation on the recent trip she led to Central Australia. 

On Thursday I had morning tea with a friend at her home and in the afternoon Michael came to talk further to me about my life, in preparation for the radio interview I agreed to do for his weekly program on Vision Radio - a community station for the vision impaired broadcasting at frequency 1197AM. We talked for just under 5 hours! He then compiled questions which he sent to me and the interview was recorded this afternoon.  He decided we had too much material for one broadcast, so we recorded two. One goes to air on Thursday 28 July at 7.30pm and the other on 4 August, repeated on the following Sundays at 12.30pm. The two interviews went smoothly - once I found the studio car park! It didn't quite follow the script of our previous session - but we got there comfortably.
On Friday morning I showered and removed the outer dressing on my knee from the mole removal. My instructions were to avoid walking with it,  so I bunkered down and knitted for much of the day. 

There is a lot of Covid in Adelaide (and everywhere else as far as I can tell). My Adelaide family is locked down with Covid, recovering slowly. I dropped in what I hope were some lockdown cheer on Saturday after I'd been to see the Eye Specialist. I included the wrist warmers I've been knitting for Katherine from the Marie Wallin kit I bought last year. A bit mad and useless in Australia - and no help at all in relation to Covid, but maybe one cold morning when walking....


According to the specialist, my eye condition is apparently a bit of a mystery - an unusual development in someone my age and usually associated with auto-immune conditions. I had an eye swab, a referral for another raft of blood tests and an appointment to see her again in 3 weeks time. I had the blood tests on Monday - all but one, for which the clinic did not have the tube. I had to ring their head office and book it. I'll go back tomorrow to have that. 

The blood test clinic was quite close to the Victoria Park Wetlands, so afterwards I went for a short walk - about 20 minutes. It's the first walk I've done since having the mole removed. I'll keep the walks short until I get the stitches out.

The wetlands were looking pretty but some of the paths were pretty muddy.
I'm on a bit of a knitting roll at the moment. This is an Arne and Carlos pattern - Jaeger- which makes a lot of sense in the snow in Norway.  I love the look, and the challenge of knitting it - but it is not a sensible garment in Adelaide, where the lowest recorded daily maximum was 8.3C in 1922. Today was only 9C, however, I'm not sure if anyone will want to wear this.

Plan B is to join the sides and create a bag. I've finished the back, and am now working on the front. It is Rowan Norwegian Wool - really lovely to work with and much easier than the Fair Isle arm warmers. this technique of working the contrast colour in a contrast stitch to the main colour. It takes concentration.
I have managed to resist the temptation to buy any of the new Bendigo Woollen Mill Alpine yarn60% Wool, 20% Alpaca, 5%Silk & 15% Neps- and also the Morris & Son sale. I have found a pattern for some Rowan yarn my brother bought at auction (left), and also some 8ply I bought myself a few years ago (right). I'm also itching to knit some of this year's Shetland Wool Week hats, using up some yarn I have stashed. Knit faster, woman! 
I've also been reading Holy Woman: a Divine Adventure  by Louise Omer, an Adelaide author who was a Pentecostal preacher until the breakdown of her marriage, after which she set out on a pilgrimage around the world to find the female divine. It is a remarkable account of the journey. It is a very specific, personal journey, with significant insights into controlling behaviours. It is not as historically based as I had expected. It has sent me off to find some more books from her bibliography - particularly in relation to the transition of Irish goddesses into Irish catholicism. 
It's been cold and grey for most of the week but there have been a couple of dramatic sunsets to alleviate the gloom. There's also the memory of that piper.


I plan to keep knitting and reading this week, going out cautiously as required. Staying safe, staying warm is the theme.