Tuesday, 17 April 2007

one of these socks is not like the other



The Socks are united. On the second one, I even looked up how to put the toe together, and via the mode of chanting the instructions out loud very slowly (obviously, sock toes will forever be a solo activity for me), I did it, so it looks like a proper sock and not a sort of twisty foot bag. However, the Second Sock is noticeably, well, smaller. I think it's because I thought I was running out of wool and started panicking. I didn't run out, but the end result is a slightly smaller sock. Which is fine providing you have one slightly smaller foot.

Now the Socks are done, summer appears to be upon us and the Birkenstocks are out, so I'm not actually wearing the Socks. Oh, cruel Fates.

Tuesday, 10 April 2007

bread, bowl, or ordinary?

Gordon bennett, it’s tiring to be foreign some days. Even after three years in Saskatchewan, I am still relying on Canadians in my close acquaintance to translate for me in the post office, the coffee shop and all eaty-out places. I now automatically say any food order, ask for directions, and state where I am trying to send my mail twice in a row so that whoever is trying to understand me can pick it up on the second go-round.

And I thought I had it. After all, having for some time been a counsellor for recently immigrated Canadians to the UK – “counsellor” here meaning “person who offers a cup of tea to” – I already knew all the good things about “home”: their home, that is, and my home-to-be. I was constantly extolling the virtues of a life in England and coming up against the Seven Wonders of the Canadian World: Hortons, Hockey Night in Canada, Kraft Dinner, cruise-control driving, the CBC Heritage Moments, politeness, and Eugene Levy’s eyebrows.

So as an immigrant to this country, amongst my weaponry were a degree specialising in Canadian literature, a rudimentary knowledge of curling, and a general willingness to talk to just about anyone, which I hoped would give me a sort of force field against problems with settling in. I knew this country. I knew its people. I knew its history and its literature. I spoke both of its languages. Bring it on.

Cut to: Safeway, a checkout, being offered “kerbside pickup”(that is, they wheel it to the kerb so you can drive your big-ass truck right up to the door) for my purchase of precisely one quart of milk.
Me, incredulous: “But it’s just a bottle of milk!”
Checkout lady and bag packer, amused by my accent: “A BOT-tle!! A BOT-tle!!!” (they are gone for about ten minutes with hilarity)

Cut to: Real Canadian Superstore, fruit and vegetable section:
Me, exasperated: “Excuse me? Can you tell me where the spring onions are?”
Several inordinately patient salespeople, many hours later: “These are called SCALLIONS (you crazy foreign lady)!”

Cut to: work, phoning someone whose book order has arrived:
Me: “Hello, could I speak to Barb, please?”
Barb’s husband: “There’s nobody here called Bob. Please go away.”(click)

Cut to: work again, phoning someone else:
Me: “Hello, could I speak to John, please?”
John’s wife, off: “John, there’s someone vaguely colonial-sounding on the phone.”
Me: “I unreservedly apologise for the actions of any and all Europeans up to and including the 21st century. I will be taking the next ship home. Sorry to disturb.”

Only someone new to this great country can appreciate the terror of being asked at top speed “double cup? bag in? Bread bowl or ordinary?” when ordering tea and soup at Tim Hortons. (Mentally punctuating this in a panic, by the way, brings up “bread (comma), bowl (comma), or ordinary?” which leads one to wonder why bread and bowl are alternatives to one another (“you mean, if I have bread, I can’t have a bowl? What is this crazy country?”)

Even the wool shop, blessed haven as it is, is a bit of a source of difficulty. After all, in England, anything you knit with is called “wool” whether it is made from sheep or acrylic or cotton or linen or bamboo or marmalade or cyanide. Here, it is “yarn”, and not only “yarn”, but “yaRRRRRn”, because otherwise I suppose I am asking for “yon”, a word only really useful in a Shakespearean or medieval context.

I’m really very tired.

Saturday, 7 April 2007

Distracted


I've got a bit sidetracked. There I was, knitting away, when suddenly I found that completely without realising it I'd been out and acquired two huge bags of wool at a charity shop, for the princely sum of eight bucks (that's about 25 English pence at current exchange, give or take a farthing). All of it pure 100% wool, all of it 100% plain cream. This is a milestone moment in my knitterly life, as I have officially metamorphosed into someone who just buys an enormous bunch of wool because it's insanely cheap and there's tons of it, rather than someone who buys wool specifically to make something with. It is a slippery slope, and I feel the pull of gravity.
So then I took out the slow cooker, some water and vinegar and dye (oh all right then, food colouring), and lo the dyeing process began. You can't see the colour variegations very well here, but they are multi-variegated in a very pleasing way. They are also about 100 times more neon than this gently-hued pic suggests, so I haven't quite got as far as deciding what I might be able to knit without sending people running in horror. Small is the key, I think. I might go for slippers and have a try at felting (ie making them into felt, sort of), but even the very best of knitters have been known to cause 400 or so bucks worth of damage to their washing machines in doing so, so I will have to think very carefully indeed before embarking on that venture.
So that's where I've been. Oh, and, you know, at work and stuff. But I'm increasingly finding that employment really cuts in on the knitting time.