Fall 09 Share Update!

The Fall Shares are moving along and will be ready for distribution before you know it. But before we can do anything though, we must have your correct address.

If you have moved since your ordered you FALL 09 Share, please email us at: addresschange AT fiberfarm DOT com ASAP.

By the end on the week I will be able to let you know how many skeins/ounces of yarn/roving the share distribution will be. I will also have photographs of the colors available for purchase posted on the blog shortly afterwards. Dyeing will cost $16 per share this year and is only available for yarn, not spinning fibers.

If you purchased a knitting share and would like to switch to a spinning share, please email us at the address above. Regretfully, we cannot change spinning shares into knitting shares this season.

PLEASE make sure you have a FALL 2009 share before emailing us with questions or changes. We spend hours every year trying to sort out shareholders that are confused about which share they purchased. If in doubt, please search your Paypal account for the info before emailing.

Thanks!

I am rich with friends

This weekend a group of shareholders from our ravelry group came from all over the country to spend a weekend on the farm.

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Even though they were on vacation they insisted on working while the were here.

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Susan and Lori

And of course there was a whole lot of knitting.

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We invited some of our local friends to join us for lunch on the farm on Saturday. It was lovely.

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I think everybody’s favorite part of the weekend was just hanging out with the flock.

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Sierra and Dimples

Buster

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Jack

It was truly a magical weekend. Seeing the farm and the animals through fresh eyes is so good for me! I feel incredibly honored that these amazing women took vacation days to spend with me. Y’all are amazing and I am humbled by your support. Thanks to everyone who came from near and far to make the last few days more perfect than I ever could have imagined they could be.

And for those of you who missed this weekend- no worries! We are to make the third Saturday of every month and open farm day when shareholders and friends can come and spend time with the flock. Bring your spinning wheel, your knitting and a picnic if you like. Children are welcome; dogs and other pets unfortunately are not.

If you’ll be coming from out of town, we can recommend the brand-new Best Western in Gordonsville. It’s about 20 minutes from the farm – the closest hotel by farm. There are many other amazing things to do in the Charlottesville area but I highly recommend a visit to Monticello or a trip to a local winery.

The only exception to the third Saturday thing will be this month, when open farm day will be 11/28.

A peek inside my brain

So here’s what goes through my head on your average Thursday:

“I really need to blog today. I’ve got a whole folder full of stuff for ‘probably something you would like’ and I haven’t taken any lamby pics in an age. Oh, and I have the photos of  colorways for the Spring 09 shares to post. And I must finish the Rhinebeck Workshop Giveaway because we have two giveaways (one of colossal proportions!)  waiting in the wings. And speaking of waiting in the wings, I’ve really got to get the new featured dyer up, but I first need to update everyone on the previous dyer shipping status. And…”

By the time my inner voice has shut up I am exhausted and can’t even contemplate writing a post that would cover everything. So I punt.

I’m going to try to get caught up a bit tonight and tomorrow so that I can tell that inner voice to shut the hell up next time it starts nagging at me. Bear with me.

Unique Sheep Featured Dyer of the Month Status Update:

We have shipped the majority of the Unique Sheep Exclusive colorways but we are awaiting the arrival of the last 50 or so orders of Jack’s Beach. We are shipping them by order date to be fair. As I mentioned in a previous blog post, neither Laura and Kelly (of Unique Sheep) or I ever intended for this to take so long but life intervened in the form of a death in the family and Sock Summit. The ladies of U.S. assure me that the rest of the yarn will be shipped to us shortly and we will get it out to you ASAP.

We have a plan for making the next Featured Dyer orders go more quickly. The next Featured Dyer will be posted here on the blog on Monday.

Winners of the Rhinebeck Workshop Giveaway:

The final two winners of our Rhinebeck Workshop Giveaway are….picture-14

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Congratulations Kimberly and Leslie! Email me at prizes@fiberfarm.com and let me know if you’d like to take Nan Crawford - Felted Soaps (Sunday October 18th – AM) or  Dyeing Self Striping Sock Yarn (Sunday October 18th PM). First one to email gets first pick! [I'll be in the Self Striping Sock Yarn class.]

A Rhinebeck-sized thank you goes to the Duchess County Sheep and Wool Growers Association for these fabulous prizes. The quality of the workshops at Rhinebeck is top-notch, which explains why I’m taking four of them-  the Shepherd’s Rug class on Thursday, the Advanced Rug Hooking class on Saturday and Nancy Shroyer’s two dyeing classes ton Sunday. Join me quick before the workshops sell out.

Speaking of Rhinebeck:

A group of FFFs (Friends of Fiber Farm) are renting a big farmhouse for the Friday and Saturday nights of Rhinebeck, October 16th & 17th. The house is 15 minutes from the fairgrounds and has 5 bedrooms, one with four bunk beds. We still have room for a few more peeps. You will probably have to share a room, maybe even a double bed- the house sleeps 14- but a good time is sure to be had by all. The cost will be in the neighborhood of $100 each per night, but it will go down if we fill up all the spaces. We would prefer to have everyone stay both nights if possible because I don’t want the organizing to turn into a nightmare. Email me if you are interested. susie@fiberfarm.com and put “Rhinebeck House” in the subject line, if you please. Space is limited- I wish we could fit everyone, but there are only so many beds.

Spring 09 Share Colorways:

We still do not know how much yarn each shareholder will be receiving as we haven’t gotten the yarn from the mill yet. As soon as we do, we’ll let you know what we are looking at. We will be sending out an email when the colorways are available for purchase. Our current plan is to offer dyeing on both the kid mohair/cormo blend and the pure cormo, but there will be a separate charge for each. The charge for dyeing the Cormo will be lower if ordered in conjunction with dyeing of the blend. Does that make sense?

Here’s a peek at the colorways:

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Spring 09 Shares Address:

Have you moved since you ordered your share? If you have we need to know about it! Send your address change info to addresschange@fiberfarm.com. We can’t send you your yarn if we can’t find you.

Do I have a Spring 09 Share?

I don’t know. In order to keep shareholders from overwhelming Erin with this question, we are asking everyone who is confused about which share they own to check your own Paypal history for the answer. Erin would have to do the same thing to get the information and there are so many more of you than there are of her. So please investigate before you email Erin with this question.

Upcoming Giveaways:

We will be doing a smallish giveaway over the weekend and the Granddaddy of all giveaways the first week in September. This is HUGE, y’all. Really, really HUGE. Stay tuned.

Lord have mercy! I did it! I got all that house-keeping-y business over with in one post. The weight of a thousand worlds has lifted from my shoulders and I will sleep like a lamb tonight.

Speaking of lambs, pics coming tomorrow. And the lambing report. And everything I forgot in this post.

Senior Picture Day

Hey guess what? I forgot to blog for a couple of days. Crazy, huh? I will make it up to you with some coolio pictures.

Remember senior pictures? How all the girls had their picture taken next to a tree? Well today was senior picture day on the farm.

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Queen Charlotte [<---- click here to see her in fleece]

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Salina

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Daisy

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Dimples is THE cutest kid I’ve ever seen.

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Jekyll [<--- click here to see her in fleece]

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Dimples again, cause I can’t get enough.

While I wasn’t blogging I was looking for inspiration for the Spring 2009 colorways. Here are some hints about what you can expect.

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This is the Cliffs of Aquinnah. It’s on of the most beautiful spots on the Island and home to one of the five lighthouses.

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I took my guests to Chilmark Pottery this week, one of my new favorite shops. The potter, Geoffry, does amazing work.

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Here are some of my early experiments. I love the blue and the jade. I’m still fine tuning the orange.

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Three more colors coming tomorrow. As soon as I settle on them and give them names I will post the colors in the shop for purchase. These colors are for the Spring 2009 Shares only!  Please check your Paypal receipt if you are unsure which shares you have.  There are so many of you and only one Erin and it takes her just as long to look it up as it will take you. I really, really don’t want her to quit!

While we’re on the subject of driving Erin crazy, have you moved since you purchased your share? If you have we need to know about it! Send you address change info to addresschange@fiberfarm.com. We can’t send you your yarn if we can’t find you. ;)

Time to giveaway another wonderful Rhinebeck workshop!

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Congratulations Joan Doyle! You have 24 hours contact us at prizes@fiberfarm.com and let us know which of our awesome workshops you’d like. Please include your first and second choice as we are waiting to hear back from one prize winner. See the list below for the classes that are still available. Everyone else, check back here tomorrow to see if you are the next winner. You DO NOT need to re-enter if you’ve already commented on this post, but you can help us out by tweeting and blogging about the giveaway. If you haven’t entered yet comment on the post below, not this one!

These are the classes we have to give away:
Kathryn Alexander – DooDads and Finishing in Knitting – Thursday October 15th - CLAIMED!
Donna Kay - Beginning Handspindle – Friday October 16th – AM
Annie Modesitt – Backyard Leaves – Friday October 16th – PM CLAIMED!
Janel Laidman – Kitchen Sink Yarns – Saturday October 17th – AM CLAIMED!
Lily Chin – Crochet Tips and Tricks – Saturday October 17th – PM CLAIMED!
Nan Crawford - Felted Soaps - Sunday October 18th – AM
Nancy Schroyer - Dyeing Self Striping Sock Yarn – Sunday October 18th PM

Attention Spring 2009 Shareholders

Did you know that you can check on the status of you shares right here on the blog? just drag your mouse over the “Yarn CSA” button in the menu bar and click on the “Spring 2009- Follow the Fleece” pull down button. Erin updates the page every time we get news from the mills about the status of our fleece.

We will be posting the six Spring 09 colors that shareholders will be able to chose from next week. Dyeing is available for an addition charge of $15. Unfortunately, we will not be able to tell you how much yarn you will be receiving in your share until all the yarn is back from the mill and we have time to do some math.

We will have a mill update for our spinner’s shares ASAP. We send the fleeces to be made into roving to a different mill- the mill in Canada can’t accommodate our needs for roving- and the spinner’s shares are a bit behind the yarn shares. Hopefully the roving will catch up while we are dyeing the yarn for the knitters.

New Shareholder Benefits

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We love our shareholders- oh yes we do! Without our shareholders this farm, website, lambcam, community would not exist. It’s crazy, but 100% true. Our shareholders are the glue that holds this entire circus together. 

And we want to express our gratitude to you, our shareholders, with a couple of little thank yous. First of all, from this day forth, all shareholders will receive a 10% discount on everything you purchase through the website, at our on-farm yarn shop or at our farmers market stands. On the website shareholders can enter the promo code: sabine to receive your discount. When buying in person, just be sure to let us know you are a shareholder so we can give you your discount.

You can use you discount on yarn, t-shirts, dye, our Hand-Dyeing Workshops, everything we sell on our website. (Discount only applies to orders placed on or after May 26th, 2009 and is only for shareholders)

The other new ‘Shareholder’s Only” benefit is even more exciting. Starting in June, we will be featuring the work of one indie dyer a month here on the blog. I’ll post an interview with the dyer with lots of pictures of his or her dye studio and works in progress. Then shareholders will have the opportunity to order an exclusive colorway, designed just for Fiber Farm shareholders!

Some of the dyers we feature will be well-known to you; others will be up-and-coming fiber artists that we think are about to make it big. In either case, we’ve chosen dyers who’s work we know you will go gaga for.

Our first featured dyers are the lovely ladies of The Unique Sheep. Laura and Kelly are hard at work coming up with two exclusive Fiber Farm colorways now. Stay tuned for photos and details.

We are so excited to offer these two small tokens of our thanks to our shareholders. Y’all not only make this possible, you make it worth doing. Your support for us has been overwhelming! Thank you for everything you do. 

If you aren’t a shareholder and would like to become one, we still have shares in our Fall 2009 clip available.

My Friend Jane

Erin and I were invited to my friend (and shareholder) Jane’s house for dinner on Saturday night and we had the most wonderful time. I always have a lovely time with Jane, actually, because she is one of the most interesting- and positive- people I know. She is one of those people who glows with happiness. I’m not being metaphorical here. She literally glows.

Dr. Jane Hurst is a professor and department chair of Philosophy and Religion at Gallaudet University in Washington D.C., and I have never had a conversation with her that wasn’t thoughtful and fascinating. She knows all kinds of great stories about the various sects and…well…cults that she has studied. She’s also a deeply spiritual person, but in a way that isn’t off-putting, if you know what I mean.
But Jane’s job is just a tiny little sliver of who she is. She is the wife of the handsome Joe, pictured with her above. (He teaches theology at Georgetown.) She’s the mom of two women- one in college, one in law school. She’s a fab cook (beef stew, roasted asparagus and apple cranberry cobbler. Yum.) 
And she is an amazing knitter. A. Maz. Ing. Jane isn’t intimidated by even the most complicated pattern and will knit and frog, knit and frog, and knit and frog until she gets it just right.

A few weeks ago, Jane bought a huge loom in pieces at a yard sale and figured out- without directions- how to put it together and use it. Here’s are the rugs she was working on Saturday. 


She is also very musical. Very musical. So musical that a few years ago, she decided that it was time to fulfill her lifelong dream of recording an album. Who does that?!? My friend Jane, that’s who!



Jane is only a couple of semesters away from retiring from her teaching job. And I can’t wait. I can’t wait to see what this woman does when she is able to follow her creative spirit on a full-time basis.
You know my favorite thing about the CSA? Besides the baby goats and lambs, I mean. My favorite part is the amazing friends I’ve met. You are all such incredible people.

Shareholder’s Certificates are in the mail


I took advantage of the kidding lull to print up a big batch of Shareholder’s Certificates. 35 of ‘em. I’m dropping them in the mail today so they should be to you soon. Thanks for your patience. 

Farm Update 2/19

My friends, what a wonderful and exhausting week it has been here on the farm.

We have had the full range of Vineyard weather on the Island in the past seven or eight days- fleeting snow, torrential down pours, winds so fierce and powerful that the ferries couldn’t run, and beautiful blue-sky-days with bone-chilling tempurtures. Today was sunny and warmish, but I don’t trust it to last. I am counting the minutes till spring when I don’t have to fight the elements and the entire flock is on pasture.

The new kids are absolutely thriving- there is just no other word for it. Little Basil’s eye problem has completely cleared up, whether from the antibiotic cream I put in it or not I don’t know. He is a tiny little peewee though, so I am leaving him in the kidding pen with his mom a little longer than usual just to be sure he is bonded and strong. He has been eating from his mom without my help since Sunday and he is a very hungry little guy!

I am so happy that we are able to keep the kids in the warmth of the hoop house for awhile after they are born. We are supposed to be moving out of the hoop house at the beginning of March, so I really want the remaining six nannies to have their kids so they can also benefit from the warm surroundings. Andrew Woodruff, the owner of the veggie CSA that is lending us the barn, is a wonderful man, very generous and kind. I know he would probably let us extend our stay a bit, but I really don’t want to take advantage of the situation. We would like to be good guest so that we get invited back next year.

Not having a proper farm is wearing on me this week. In New York we were positively spoiled. We had more than 35 acres that we were reclaiming as pasture land, cutting down the trees a few at a time so the flock could strip the leaves off, then cutting them for firewood. It isn’t a perfect set-up- the land is adjacent to the Taconic Parkway (a busy highway that connects NYC to the rest of the state)- but it is ours. Being guest on the land of others is hard, because we could be asked to leave at any time and that is always in the back of my mind.

Unfortunately, it is the reality of life on Martha’s Vineyard. Real estate prices have sky rocketed here since 2000 when the first house sold for $1 million. I read an ad in the paper last week with the headline “Price Drastically Reduced” that was for a two bedroom mobile home on 1/4 of an acre and was “drastically reduced” to $249,000!

Patrick and I are lucky to own a home here. We bought it as a summer rental before we moved up full-time, and without it we probably wouldn’t have taken jobs here. It’s on the market now while we look for a place that might someday accommodate a fiber mill and Bed and Breakfast.

The animals at Felix Neck seem to be adapting to their new home. They have already made a dent in the invasive bittersweet and they will be in heaven there when green things start to come out. Last fall, I pointed to a rolling green pasture and told Patrick that, in a few months, that kind of green would seem impossible, and it does.

Our Shearing Day Fiber Festival plans are well under way. The fun will begin on Saturday, April 19th at 10 a.m. I hope you can come because it’s really a party thrown in your honor. I am so grateful to all of you and it will be nice to get to thank some of you in person.

I had two Shareholder visitors this weekend and it was so nice to get to show off the flock. Beth was here on Sunday with her beautiful baby Aubrey and they spent an hour oohing and awing over the kids. Beth started a great thread over at the ravelry group about he visit if you want to check it out.

Christine and her husband Brian spent the weekend on the Vineyard and visited both the babies and the rest of the flock on Sunday. Our insane rooster Dan Rather really didn’t like Brian much and relentlessly attacked him in the kidding barn. It was terribly embarrassing and a tiny but funny, but only because Brian was such a great sport about it. It did reenforce my decision to do something about that rooster.

Our flock will be expanding by one this weekend when Mark and Melinda bring their sheep Daisy over to Felix Neck to join the others. Daisy is an Icelandic/Navajo Churro cross that Mark rescued from being sent to auction this fall. She is a sweetheart of a sheep and has a nice fleece as well. It will be interesting to see what kind of lambs she and our Cormo lamb Lincoln produce.

Adding one sheep to an existing flock is a tricky thing. The other sheep (not so much the goats) will often bully and butt a new sheep, so I am planning to put Daisy in an adjacent pen for a couple of days with Jack and Roquefort (last year’s bottle babies and all around good guy goats) until everyone else gets used to her being around.

We actually already have a Daisy in our flock so the new Daisy will be known as Daisy2 from now on. The original Daisy was one of my original four sheep and, while she doesn’t exactly come when you call her, she deserves a little respect. She is a Babydoll Southdown, a sheep not exactly known for their fine wool, but I had no idea what I was doing when I bought four of them. I am looking into having their wool turned into quilting batts, so if there are any quilters among you let me know.

The article in the Vineyard Gazette is definitely bringing visitors to Felix Neck to check out the sheep and goats. In fact, two couple s came by to see them while I was showing Christine and Brian around, but their attention very quickly turned to the dogs. Our dogs are just such amazing creatures. They are beautiful, fun and funny, and absolutely loyal. Cini has more than once protected me from our mean, charging ram, Lincoln.

These two pictures of Cini are my absolute favorites. He is such a gentle giant. In the first pic, Cini is licking Buster’s ear. In the second he is checking out the hours-old FDR.


The picture below is one of the nannies who hasn’t kidded yet. She has the very best horns I’ve ever seen (remind you of Marlo Thomas in That Girl?) but she also has a really cool personality. We will be needing a really good name for her.

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© Copyright 2010 by Juniper Moon Farm. All rights reserved.
The country's first Yarn and Fiber CSA raising registered Angora Goats, registered Cormo, Cotswold and Babydoll Southdown sheep. We sell fleeces, roving and yarn and shares in our spring yarn harvest. We also offer farm consulting services. Advertise on this site.