Skip to main content

Weekending - with a new "knitting" bag

For our longer runs, Leon and I have traditionally run to places, and then got ourselves home in more mechanical ways. During lockdown of course we just ran around in circles - and when your circles are St Kilda Beach, Albert Park Lake, the Tan and the Yarra, you don't complain too much.

But now we are out and about again. a couple of weeks ago we ran to the Docklands to meet some friends at a brewery (as is traditional) and I really didn't want to do without my knitting for a whole afternoon of fun, so I borrowed Leon's running vest.   I enjoyed being able to carry my knitting so much, that I went and bought my own vest - also a Salomon, but the ladies version, so there is room for "the girls". The guy who served me in the running shop (the legendary Sole Motive) was really nice - but he was a footballer, working in a running shop. He kept telling me how many litres of water this thing can carry, while I was seeing how big a WIP can go in the back. 

Answer:

An almost finished Ranunculus. 

On Sunday, Leon and I  ran (in the ran) for an hour and a half. I wore the vest with a just started Baby Surprise Jacket and about 150 grams of yarn in the back:


It was very comfortable. I didn't actually get the knitting out - we ran, got breakfast and then, because we were rather damp, caught a bus straight home, but it's good to know that it's comfortable and useful.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Linky Wednesday - 3/2024

  It's been a bit of a week. Because of my hand , I can't really knit, so I'm doing some charity crocheting:  It's quite fun, but also I'm halfway through a shrug for myself, and I'd rather be knitting. Oh well, we can't always get what we want! In reading, I'm reading Stargazy Pie , the next Victoria Goddard. This is a comedy of manners and  lots of things happen. I can't say I feel deeply  about any of them, but that's not the point. It's fun.   I'm listening to Elin Hilderbrand's The Five-Star Weekend . It's got a lot of characters, and it took me while to get into it, but now I'm invested. Women's fiction at it's finest. Next up is a review book Tidelines by Sarah Sasson. Great cover. It's Australian, and you know how I love a local book (although I think it's set, or at least starts in Sydney). It's described as a coming of age  novel, and I love those too, so it sounds like a winner.  I just re-read t...

Geogradiant MKAL Part 1 - that was unexpected (spoilers)

Stephen West released the first MKAL clue on Thursday night. I started knitting it without looking at spoilers. When I got up on Friday he had sent through an "alternative" clue one. I then went and had a look at the spoiler thread to try to work out what was going on. Which was that some people thought the pattern looked like a "German hate symbol". I knit on anyway, since I was half-way through. Then he took down the original clue, replacing it with a mitred square in garter stitch. The Ravelry forums and Instagram are a complete shit-show, even though Rav is being moderated. It's been a bit disheartening, having something that is usually quite light and fun weighed down with all this. I admire Stephen's quick and sensitive response to this drama. I also feel that anything can look like anything if you squint. To me this looks like a Celtic knot. I think mine is pretty, and I'll knit on through all crises. 

Linky Wednesday - the one with the pause

In meditation it's said that the pause between the in breath and the out breath is a gap, a space to rest. Well, I'm in that in-between space for reading, listening and knitting. This is a random photo of a highlight of my week - I filled up my lolly jar. These are just supermarket party mix. During the lockdowns, we sources a great pick-and-mix delivery service, but at some point they started sending from the UK, which is a bit silly. Rachey messaged me a new one she found, and I impulsed purchased a kilo of mixed lollies, and then she sent me a link to the biggest lolly shop in Melbourne, which also delivers sweets by the kilogram, so i think I'm sorted for the rest of the year!  In reading I've just finished  The Beckoning Lady   by Margery Allingham . It's the second last book in the Summer of Mystery, and I have to admit, having now read nine Margery Allingham books, that they are OK. I wouldn't have read them if they were not connected to this club, but on...