Can you ever have too many spindles? I guess it depends on whether you’re looking at it from the spinner’s point of view, or the onlooker. As for the former’s, they’re precision tools and one size does definitely not fit all.
I decided to get a Jenkins’ spindle as I’ve admired these for many a year and have marvelled at the craftmanship when I’ve actually got to play with a fellow guildy’s purchase. Even though the postage wasn’t so high, the order was combined with a another guildy’s (word gets around quickly amongst the fibre-obsessed). This worked out perfectly, as mine came with a free sample of targhee in various shades of pink and green, while hers was blue. We swapped, although the colour wasn’t really that important considering I was happy to try a new sheep breed.
The spindles arrived well-protected and wrapped in bird-themed paper. It was just like opening a Christmas present. They’re real works of art – perfectly made and smooth to the touch. All the info is written on the underside. Naturally, I spent a lot of time admiring them and practise-spinning in my hand. So well-balanced and comfortable to use, even with my large paws.
I’m now the proud owner of a Finch and a Wren… and yes, planning to purchase another …
ciboule en poudre, Winterzwiebelpulver, cebolleta en polvo, Allium fistulosum
You can see from the photo of the onion stems just how big the plants had grown – too big to eat as they were. There were two choices: use them for stock, or dry and grind them. The latter it was.
The leaves were chopped into rings and dried in the dehydrator set at 50oC. How long did it take? I didn’t time it, but most of the day. The stems weren’t only thick as, but also very glutinous.
Once finished, they went into the blender and whizzed until ground. The powder is still good after a month or so of storage, and the smell is still quite pungent. Great for soups and stews, and also replacing the package full of salt and other things that comes with instant noodles.
I shall definitely be doing some more, as the bunch I cut back now doesn’t look as though it was trimmed in the first place. We grow ’em big ‘ere!
I’ve been using my Turkish spindles a lot lately, more so than the other types in my collection. My IST spindles are in the following woods: London Plane, Bog Oak and Spalted Beech. But why these choices?
I’m a Londoner. London Plane trees are everywhere in the capital – lining the streets and spreading out in the parks, nudging branches with red and white horse chestnuts. As a schoolchild, I would wander home in the autumn and early winter, scrunching through the fallen leaves on the pavement. I can still remember the smell and was reminded of that when I was in Dublin in 2018, where their autumn had come a little earlier than in Sussex. Do children (and adults) still play with itchy balls? Hopefully everyone’s learnt how itchy these things can be and are kinder to their friends. If you don’t know what an itchy ball is, it’s the dried fruit of the plane. When it’s broken open, the hairy seeds can cause quite an irritation when plopped down someone’s back. Not nice and potentially dangerous.
I had a moment of nostalgia when I was walking along North Terrace, Adelaide, and a plane leaf dropped from it’s twig, and drifted down to the pavement in the most poetic fashion, gliding here and there, twisting, turning, floating upwards and then downwards again. Autumn, and an image of Winnie the Pooh coming to mind.
So that leads on to oak, the national tree of England. The sight of one of these trees spreading its boughs un-nudged in a field is symbolic of the English countryside. The smell of rotting oak leaves also reminds me of my childhood, walking home from school through the “squirrel park” where the “parky” used to spend all his time clearing up the fallen leaves with a besom, then carting them off in his wheelbarrow to a humongous compost pile. The smell was strangely sweet/herbal and one that I’m never likely to forget. The spindles are actually made from bog oak – 4,000 year-old oak from the fens. As a history buff, this adds heaps to their appeal.
And beech… Have you ever walked past or through a beech grove in the cooler months, where the unmistakable copper glow of the carpet of fallen leaves contrasts perfectly with the smooth, silver-grey trunks? In summer, the leaves provide a cooling shade from the sun, with their lighter undersides adding an individually mysterious shimmer. There I go a-waxing lyrical… I remember being taught how to eat beech nuts by my Mum, who no doubt hadn’t savoured them since her childhood. We were at Farthing Downs, south of Croydon, where we so often used to take our dog Penny for a walk. The beech trees were at the top of the road, where it became a footpath, and stood proudly at the entrance to some fascinating woodland.
OK, so that’s how I choose my spindles! What makes IST Turkish spindles unique is the shape of the arms and also the brass weights, giving them more spin. The overall design is unique to craftsman Ian Tait. Note that my blog is non-commercial, and that any recommendation of a product or supplier is simply that.