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Friday, February 10, 2012


Baa Baa Black Sheep
Baa baa black sheep
Have you any wool? 
Yes sir, yes sir
Three bags full.
One for my master
One for my dame,
and one for the little boy 
Who lives down the lane.
Baa baa black sheep 
Have you any wool?
Yes sir, yes sir, three bags full.


I must have chanted that rhyme a million times as a child, and not once did I ever think that I would be the one holding the three bags of wool. Who would have thought that I would have a sheep farm one day? I think there are members of my extended family who still wonder at such a thing. Our journey in farming has evolved and grown over time. We did not set out to own a sheep farm. They entered our lives as a means to maintain our pastures. Using the wool from our sheep was an after thought, and now is the focal point of just about everything I do.

Our farm now raises meat (chicken and pork), pasture lambs, eggs, and vegetables for our own family, and a few fortunate neighbors, fellow farmers, and guests. I spend the better part of the summer and fall growing, harvesting, and putting away our bounty. Five years ago, we converted one end of our home into bed and breakfast rooms. This endeavor, to share our rural farm life with others, extends what began 25 years ago as a desire to raise our own food, into a desire to help others make a connection between farm and food, and farm and yarn.

Shearing Day at Grand View Farm 2011
Our sheep and other fiber animals (llamas and German Angora rabbit), provide the central focus to our farm and my life. Our yarn business and the fiber classes we hold here on the farm, rely upon them for their wool. The astute yarn customer or guest to our farm recognizes that our small flock can not possibly provide all the wool necessary for all the yarn we produce.  So where does the wool come from that goes into our yarn? All of our yarn CSA shares come from the wool produced here on our farm, from our own sheep, llamas, and rabbits. In doing so, I am certain of the quality of wool and fiber put into the yarn. My CSA customers want to feel a direct connection to our livelihood and our animals. They wish to "know" their wool producers and know their purchase supports a family farm. When our customers come to the farm, I can personally introduce them to the flock that provided the wool for the yarn they have purchased. I can introduce them to the llamas that their share helped us purchase, and they can hold the bunny whose fiber was used to make their shawl. Our CSA share holders feel a connection to our family and farm, and have the satisfaction of knowing that they have supported us and our farming efforts.

Ewe and Lamb from John O'Brien's Flock
Once all of the CSA yarn has been fulfilled, I then turn to a local farm just about 10 miles down the road to provide me with additional Romney wool. John O'Brien, movie producer and shepherd, maintains a large flock of Romney sheep, which he inherited from his parents. A mutual fiber friend, saw the potential of my yarn business and John's wool, and connected the two of us together. John raises his sheep primarily for meat lambs. For years, he composted his wool. Now, I purchase the wool from him, and have put his own yarn, made from his own sheep, into his hands and the hands of his friends. Last year, I used approximately 18 fleeces from John's flock. He does not coat his sheep in the winter as I do, and so the process of skirting his fleeces is tedious and takes a long time. In the end, I am rewarded with lovely Romney locks of wool with an amazing luster. This wool goes into my bulky weight yarn, sock yarn, and felting batts. So now, my yarn customers support not just one Vermont farm, but two!
Two Lambs from 2011

At our current level of farming, I know that my endeavors on our farm will not make me rich, and will not even support our family. My husband has a "real job" and earns the income needed to raise a family of five, home school, and now send our children off to college. I need my sheep, and all of the animals here on our farm, to earn their keep, and that is what they do. We are stashing away something much more valuable than money here on our farm. We are enriching lives. My reward comes when a yarn customer visits the farm and has an "aha" moment, making the connection between their knitting project and my sheep, or when a child from New York City collects fresh eggs for the first time, or when my farmstay guest looks at me in amazement, after eating breakfast, and says, "it tastes so fresh!" They have fit the pieces of the puzzle together; their appreciation for and their value of local farms and sustainable agriculture has increased exponentially. Our farm has made the connection, and one more person in the world understands what "buy local" and farming is all about.



Thursday, February 09, 2012


Will you be my Valentine?

Tell your sweet heart you love them with a beautiful wool heart!! It is so simple, even children can enjoy it!
  1. Gather a small zip lock bag, wool roving, shiny glitz, and  locks of mohair. 
  2. Gather your supplies
    Your batt is now ready for felting
  3. Pull tufts of wool from the roving and lay them out on top of the zip lock baggie. You will be creating a batt with the wool. Now, continue to pull thin tufts of wool off of the roving and make a second layer on top of your first one. Lay the wool in the opposite direction. Be sure that as you layer the thin pieces of wool roving that there are no holes. You want an even layer of wool. Now lay your tufts of mohair and glitz on top of the batt. 
  4. Carefully slide your batt into the zip lock bag. Add several drops of liquid dish soap and carefully sprinkle about 4 tablespoons of warm water into the bag. Zip it shut.
    Slide the batt into the baggie.
  5. Gently begin patting the baggie. Be careful not to ball up the wool inside the bag. You want all the wool to be wet and soapy. Add  more water and more soap if you need to. Once all the wool is wet you may begin to gently rub the baggie. Continue rubbing for about 5 minutes. Children love to sing a song while they work.
Rub the baggie gently.











    5.  Now begin rubbing vigorously. Rub the baggie for about 5 to 10 minutes longer. Open it up to see if the wool has turned to felt yet. If you can pinch and pull fibers up from the batt then you need to work it a little bit more.
Rubbing more vigorously



     6.  Now take the piece of felt out of the baggie and rinse it under warm water and then rinse under cold water.
Rinsing your felt.
Your wool Valentine!!
    7.  Smooth your piece of felt out and let it dry. It is now ready to cut into a heart shape!
Let your wool felt dry.