Showing posts with label Herdwick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Herdwick. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 July 2021

Tour de France/Tour de Fleece 2021 Stage 10

The Cycling: Stage 10 is 190.7km long and starts in Albertville and ends in Valence. A flat route today, through the valleys of the rivers Isère and Rhône.  Mark Cavendish won the stage. 

Team Challenge: "Today the race passes through Chambéry, famous for its Fontaine des Éléphants (Fountain of Elephants) which was built in 1838.  The four elephants are very lifelike, even if you can only see their front ends!.

A non-spinning challenge today: shock: Find out the nickname of this statue and have a listen to L'Elephant by Camille Saint-Saëns as you spin".

What I planned to do and what I achieved:  First up, I Googled the statue. The nickname of the statue is "the four without asses".  It honours General Count de Boigne and stands 17.65m tall, built in limestone and consists of a fountain, a column and a statue.  The fountain represents the Cross of Savoy with four elephants joined by the rump with water flowing through their trunks into a basin.  There is an inscription above each of them.  

A column stands on top of the elephants, symbolised by a palm tree trunk and decorated with Persian, Mughal and Hindu weapons and various objects representing the customs, arts and civilisation of the people that he fought or governed.

The statue is of the General dressed in his costume of Lieutenant-General of the Kingdom or Sardinia.  His hand resting on an oriental sword whilst his other hand holds a document representing donations granted to the city by the Count of Boigne.  The statue is bronze, was cast in Paris, weights 750kg and is 2.82m in height.

 


I also Googled the music and had a listen and all I am going to say is "Hmmm, yes, not my cup of tea", that is about as polite as I can be about that.

So what did I do today in relation to spinning.  Well, I decided to work on the Herdwick that I spun a few days ago and pick out the coarse fibres that didn't get pulled out or fell out whilst spinning and now that I have done that it is much nicer and softer to handle.



Sunday, 4 July 2021

Herdwick Sheep

Herdwick Sheep have been roaming across the fells of the Lake District since at least the 12th century when the name appears in writings as Herdwyck or Herdvyck, which is Norse for "Sheep Pasture" which gives credibility for the theory that these originated in Scandinavia, having being with bought here by the Vikings.

Top right: young sheep about 1 year old           Top left: Ewe and newborn lamb
Bottom: Mature rams

The Herdwick sheep, at the time of writing, is in the Rare Breeds Survival Trust category 6:  "Other UK Native Breeds" (over 3000) registered breeding ewes and they are usually found across the Lake District, although there are a few small flocks now appearing in other locations in the UK, probably as a result of interest from hand spinners in the unusual fleece and also as a safety net for the future of the breed should we ever have another outbreak of foot and mouth disease, which drastically reduced the number of flocks during the last outbreak in 2001. They are an instantly recognisable breed and an icon of the Lake District, especially with tourists.  Individual sheep tend to be hefted to a specific part of the mountain or fell and will remain there, often where they were born, without the need for fencing.

In the later part of her life, the children's author Beatrix Potter, who is well known for having moved out of her parents home in London following the death of her publisher and intended husband Norman Warne, bought herself Hilltop Farm in the Lake District in 1905.  She loved the area so much that as farms came up for sale she bought them to prevent the land falling into the hands of developers who wanted to build on the land and thus preserving the beauty of the Lake District as we know it today.  She went on to marry William Heelis in 1913. She was also involved with keeping and breeding Herdwick sheep and for a time was even President of the sheep breed association and won a number of prizes for ewes at shows between 1930 and 1938.  Upon her death in 1943, she bequeathed 15 farms, totalling around 4,000 acres, to the National Trust to be preserved for the grazing of Herdwick flocks.  When William died in 1945 the remainder of the land was given to the National Trust.

The Herdwick is a medium build sheep with a white head and legs.  They are regarded as the most hardy of all of the British breeds and can survive on the highest ground.  Their fleece sheds water more efficiently than other fleeces and also dries out more quickly. Lambs are born totally black but their faces, ears and legs soon turn white and by the time they are 1 year old their fleece has become dark brown.  The fleece becomes lighter year on year and the oldest sheep can reach the point of having an all white fleece.  They should have a strong ruffle or mane around the neck and top of the shoulder and this generally contains more coarse fibres than the rest of the fleece. Rams are usually horned, ewes are polled.

They produce a medium size fleece of 1.5-2kg in weight that contains an undercoat of relatively soft wool, guard hairs, heterotypic hair which change with the season so are more wool like for warmth in winter and more hair-like for shedding rain in the summer and then there is kemp.  Sometimes there is a lot of kemp.  It is easier to prepare when it is long because although these fibres are happy to hang out together if you want to separate them then its easier to do so when the fleece is longer.  It is also easier to spin this if the fibres are longer than short. 

The staple lengths can range 3-10 inches (7.5-25.5cm) but are generally 4-8 inches (10-20.5cm).  The locks are dense and clumpy and tend to contain a mix of the four fibre types with the mane area being the coarsest.  They are usually grey, although lambs are black through to brown so you might be able to get black or brown fleece if you can get a lamb or shearling fleece or you may be able to get a tan brown fleece from a sheep being sheared for the second time. The kemp fibres will not show dye much, if at all, and darker fleece won't show any colour but the lighter grey fleeces may show dye, although it will be like undyed wool and be tweedy.

This fleece can be spun from teased locks.  Combing may separate some of the fibre types and carding is best for shorter fleeces.  If you intend to spin all the fibre types into your yarn then you need to use the lightest touch to keep them well blended otherwise they will be effectively filtered by your hand and spun separately.  You need enough twist to hold it together but not much that you make rope.

Yarns spun from Herdwick fleece are definitely suited to household items and upholstery, especially if all fibre types have been spun together.  If you have separated the soft undercoat out from the rest of the fleece and spun that then those yarns might be suitable for hats, sweaters and such like but still not likely to be used for next to skin wear.  


I have bought this breed in as 100g of pre-prepared fibre.  I also had a 25g sample that I got with another pack from the same supplier so split the 100g in half to make two shorter lengths and then with the 25g I split it down along the length to make two thinner long lengths and then pulled it out until it was the same length as the 50g half.  I then pre-drafted the fibre together.  This evens out any slight difference in colour there may be between them.



My finished yarn is of very sturdy to the touch of the hand but doesn't feel too rough, but then again I did sit and remove a lot of the kemp in both black and white and you can still feel the prickly hair and kemp if you put it up to your neck (the best place to test a yarn for the tickle factor because the skin there is quite sensitive).  I have 117g/237m of sport weight yarn.  My knitted piece for the project took 24g/49m so I have some left to do whatever with.



Tour de France/Tour de Fleece 2021 Stage 9

The Cycling: Stage 9 is 144.9km long and starts in Cluses and ends in Tignes.  Starting in the Arve valley there are another 5 climbs today and the finish is at high altitude, up in the mountains, at Tignes, a ski-resort.  Ben O'Connor won the stage.  

Team Challenge: "Today we have a mountain stage; it is going to be hard on some riders and a challenge for all of them.  In everything we do we have things that challenge us - even spinning!  

Your challenge today is the polar opposite of Stage 4: spin something you really don't like.  It could be a colour you can't stand, something with a texture that displeases you or that top that you wish you'd never bought!  This is a great opportunity to get this poor maligned fluff out of your stash and in to the world... you never know, you may like it!".

What I planned to do and what I achieved:  I plied my Herdwick this morning and got 125g/241m  of sport weight yarn.  That is another 723m for the team total.  

We have now collectively spun twice the length of Chesil Beach, to Portland and back, which leads me nicely into my 450g of hand combed Portland top and I've started to spin that.

This is just a small portion of the 450g of hand combed top.


Saturday, 3 July 2021

Tour de France/Tour de Fleece 2021 Stage 8

The Cycling: Stage 8 is 150.8km and starts in Oyonnax and ends in Le Grand-Bornand. There are 5 classified climbs today. This is part of the Alps sections of the race.  Dylan Teuns won the stage.  

Team Challenge: "Oyonnax is where we start today; a town that once had the monopoly on producing boxwood combs.  In fact, this is such a big part of the town's history that they have a museum with over 16,000 items from old wooden combs to more modern plastic and bio-plastic versions.

When preparing fibre we either card it to make batts and slivers or comb it to make tops.  (See that seamless link?  We've had our hobnobs today!)

Today's challenge is to spin from a different preparation that you normally do.  Rolags, batts, slivers, rovings, tops - there are lots of options!".

What I planned to do and what I achieved: I'm not doing the challenge today as I am spinning a 100g bump of Herdwick plus 25g of Herdwick from a British Breeds Sample back, both purchased from World of Wool.  As I've done in the past I split the larger amount into two by holding the two ends together, finding the middle and separating into two equal amounts at that point.  Then with the sample amount, I split that into two the same way but then stretched each out to the same length as the larger bumps and spun both the sample and the larger bump at the same time in each case so that the fibres mixed.

Unfortunately, I forgot to take work-in-progress photos of the spinning but I do have a photo of the larger bump of Herdwick.



Thursday, 19 April 2018

Parcel of Fibre from World of Wool

I have treated myself to a range of commercial ready-to-spin fibres from World of Wool.

I've bought a couple with the intention of spinning these as they are, a sample pack of British Breeds because I've heard a lot about some of those included in this pack but not sure if they're right for me and my needs and I don't want to fork out on buying a whole or part fleece only to discover its not for me, and the rest I've bought with the intention of using as ingredients with other fibres to create my own blends, although this means that I will have to look at buying dyes specifically for plant based fibres because I only have dyes for animal protein fibres.

The first one is 100g of 50% Polwarth, 25% Alpaca, 25% Silk and the last one is 100g of Zwartbles combed top as I wanted to try Zwartbles again following the poor quality fleece I had the unfortunate opportunity of processing previously.  The samples of British Breeds contain 25g each of Dorset Horn, Whitefaced Woodland, Moorit Shetland, Brown Bluefaced Leicester, Light Grey Herdwick, Light Grey Swaledale, Black Welsh and Black Jacob.

Dorset Horn I have only tried previously as a cross breed fleece I had.  Shetland I have had a few times but never in the Moorit colour.  Bluefaced Leicester I have spun once before, back in my early days of spinning and Black Jacob, well, I've spun lots of Jacob fleece, I've probably spun more Jacob than anything else.  The other breeds, Whitefaced Woodland, Herdwck, Swaledale and Black Welsh I have never spun before so it will be interesting to see how they handle.


The Merino/Suri Alpaca blend I might spin that and then dye it afterwards, not sure yet exactly what I will do with that.  The other fibres are all plant fibres and can be used blended with each other or I can blend them with any of the fleece as I process them.  These will become part of an "ingredients box" along with the various colours of Angelina that I have.