Snow Days on Alba Ranch

Wow,Wow, Wow!! We got more snow in the last 24 hours that I recall getting even as a child. We have about 20+ inches on the ground. Now mind you, that is on top of the 12 inches that I got last week. Which with all the cold temperatures did NOT melt.

Driveway Area after 20+ inches of snow in 24 hours

I tried to get out with the 4WD Landrover yesterday. I got about 20 feet and was stuck. It left a perfect imprint of the head lights in the snow drift that built up in front of the bumper. Managed to get it reversed and back in its post.

Our Mountain and Pole Barn Site
Landrover in there somewhere??

Then we tried the 4WD Suburban. It took off, up the hill and down the drive the eighth mile to the gate where I had to stop as the gate was closed. I guess that lift kit and huge tires really help with ground clearance since the snow was all the way up the running boards. Got it turned around and back down to the barn. I got into a bit of trouble on the hill as I was trying to turn around and started to slide. Well, being from Michigan originally and always driving cars that were rear wheel drive and most often with bald tires, I seriously know how to slide. Gunning it a bit, I slide in sideways using the slide to get the arse end swung around and wallah, back in front of the barn and did not even hit the Landrover.

We shoveled about 20 inches deep of snow off about 750 sq feet area in front of the barn where the vehicles go and moved them back in place. Then it was time to take my baby out of the barn, my 1985 CJ7, and take her up the hill. I was stunned. She dead ended in the snow at about the same spot as the LandRover. Apparently the Rover and Jeep, can not make it through more than 20 inch of snow. They do NOT have lift kits you see. Oh well.

Alpacas unimpressed by the snow

The Livestock Guardian Dogs (LGD) were out with the alpacas through the storm. Of course they were smarter than the alpacas as they were buried in the BACK of the shelters with the alpacas lying in guard over the door opening. Hey who said dogs were not smart??

Larick, the LGD of the female alpacas

We took 2 border collies out for our usual walk of a quarter mile in the evening. A mother and daughter dog team of Abbey and Cinnamon. Cinnamon decided to go off trail and was literally snorkeling. The snow was OVER her head and she had to tip her nose up and try not to inhale all the snow. Abbey, older and wiser, stayed in the tracks with mom and dad! ha!!

Abbey, much more comfortable INSIDE on the rug
Cinnamon, crashed out on the rug after a hard day of play!

This morning, we took almost the entire pack of border collies out in the snow to play and go for the quarter mile walk as I expect the snow plow guy will show up sometime today. Abbey only made it about as far as the Landrover and Jeep and she was down. It is 3 degrees out and it was just too cold for her puppy paws, so Charlie had to carry her back to the cabin. The rest of the dogs were younger and more foolish and they floundered on with mom. Dad came back a bit behind us and got some good video of them all going under the snow over and over.

Snow Snorkeling Border Collies. Gotta love them!! Everyone is now back in the cabin with a roaring fire in the stove and steaming everything up.

All this snow has made it very interesting to do the chores outside. I have had to shovel out the hay feeders several times for the alpacas to have their hay. We boil gallons of water to unthaw all the water buckets….repeatedly….several times a day. We had to shovel paths everywhere to even find the alpacas and chickens. We were out yesterday morning at 6:30 am shoveling and putting up a tarp for the male alpacas because one went in the shelter and the other stayed outside. They are not exactly friends, so with the tarp, it gives a second space away from the other to be in shelter. The girls have several shelters in their pens so they were fine.  With all these extras needing to be done because of the snow, any fiber work had to be postponed.  I try to do fiber creation on a daily basis of something.  Course, I guess it does depend on how you look at it.  The fiber animals survived through the store to grow more fiber on a another day.  That is Fiber Creation at the most basic, right?

I had to take the long handle broom and knocked off several feet of snow built up on the edge of the barn as it was poised for an avalanche and more than likely would have taken all the eaves off at the barn at the same time. We used the same long handle broom to get the several feet of snow off the Landrover and the Suburban. Charlie was out in the barn sawing up off cuts of wood from the barn build to make dry fire wood for the stove as the rest is buried under several feet of snow that the snow plow guy put up over it last week, then add the new 20 inches of snow on top of that. I think we won’t find that wood until JUNE!!

Going to go have homemade meatloaf, bread pudding and purple mashed potatoes for breakfast. Yes the potatoes were purple naturally so the mashed potatoes are as well. Charlie thinks they are weird!! We had it for dinner last night and I am still NOT out of comfort food mode!!

Melisa and Charlie Morrison of Alba Ranch exhibiting at ArtPrize 2011

Melisa and Charlie Morrison of Alba Ranch are exhibiting at ArtPrize 2011 in Grand Rapids, MI. September 21-October 9, 2011.

Bits and Bobs

Waters Building

161 Ottawa Ave. NW

Suite 112

Grand Rapids, MI

Text Voting has to be done for week 1 by Sept 28 for us to make it to the Top 10 and be eligible for week two voting. Please vote for us and tell your friends:

From Sept 21-28, week 1, you vote thumbs up or thumbs down on if you like it. during night of Sept 28 they tally all the thumbs up votes. you get thumbs up or thumbs down in 1st wk on EVERY entry. there are about 1600+ entries. whomever is in the Top 10 of the thumbs up votes then moves on to week two. in Week two you are only allowed ONE vote, and that vote is which you like the best of those 10. from those week two votes they then determine 1-10th place.

all the Top 10 places have cash prizes. 1st is $250,000. 2nd is $100,000. 3rd is $50,000. 4th-10th are each $7000. so make it to the Top 10 and you will go home with cash of some kind.

Up for Melisa: 43221

Up for Charlie: 43231

This is the 3rd year this contest has run and I have never really seen much to do with fiber ever entered into this show. So I am there, trying to represent. you can see lots of photos of the projects Alba Ranch – Art by Melisa and Charlie Morrison photo albums. there are two albums. Bits and Bobs is the Fiber for Melisa and a Year in a Day is the Oil Paintings of Charles Gordon Morrison. Come, see, vote and help support Fiber and Visual Art.

A Year in a Day
ArtPrize 2011

Norman Kennedy at Table Rock Llama Shop

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Norman kennedy at Table Rock Llama Fiber Studio

This was such a special event and so exciting that I had to blog about this in BOTH my blogs.  so forgive me if you read both.  Alba Ranch, Melisa and Charlie Morrison,  saw Norman Kennedy at Table Rock Llama Shop in Black Forest, Colorado last night.

Norman Kennedy was born in 1933 on King Street in Aberdeen, Scotland.  Charlie Morrison was born and raised in Buckie, Scotland about 1.5 hours outside of Aberdeen.  Melisa and Charlie lived in Aberdeenshire after they were married so it was exciting to be around folks from Scotland again.

Weldon Walker, pictured in a blue shirt to Norman’s left, wove a lovely blanket in a tartan like pattern that was the main piece for the Waulking demonstration. Norman said that he always has the weaver of the cloth sit to his left as that keeps him close to his heart.  The piece had just come off the loom and was a 2:2 twill.  After the waulking, Norman laid the cloth out on the table to roll it with a board.  You can see it laid out here on the table just prior to being rolled.

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Norman Kennedy and a freshly waulked cloth

Waulking is a step in woolen cloth making that fulls the fiber using water, soap and friction.  It is traditionally called Waulking in Scotland.  The cloth is cleaned, thickened and shrunk all in this process.

Norman has lived in the USA since 1966 and currently has a home and Fiber Art School in Vermont.  He travels around the USA doing demonstrations, classes, waulking and concerts.  He cards, spins, weaves and waulks the fiber in the “old” ways keeping traditions alive along with his extensive collection of English and Gaelic songs.  Doing repetitive work, the songs keep his rhythm steady and are an essential part of the work.  In June 2003, Norman received the  National Heritage Fellowship awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts in the USA.

It was lovely to see Norman and talk with him.  There was also another lady there from Scotland as well named Moira Theriault.  It turned out that she was friends with a John Taylor from Buckie, Scotland that now currently lives in CA.  His youngest brother is Donald Taylor, who just happened to be one of Charlie’s mates from school in Buckie.  Very small world indeed.