Greetings, Rural Sprout Readers,
I hope you all had a lovely Thanksgiving this past Thursday. We gathered with family to enjoy the traditional fare that goes with the holiday. And when I’m done typing up this newsletter, I’m going to head to the kitchen for a slice of pumpkin pie and another cup of coffee.
Pie makes for wonderful breakfast food, wouldn’t you agree?
Other than a quick trip to a local yarn shop, I avoided the madness that is Black Friday. I’ve never understood the appeal of getting up before the sun to stand in lines for deals on stuff that will be outgrown or out of date within a year or two.
I had a friend convince me to go with her once. Her family loved Black Friday; it was almost like a bonus holiday to them. I admit I had fun, but that had more to do with the company and our peppermint hot cocoa and silly matching hats, not necessarily the amazing bargains.
But getting back to the quick trip to the local yarn shop, my sweetie’s mother and I went with handmade Christmas gifts in mind. I was looking specifically for yarn to knit my sweetheart some socks and a pair of flip-top mittens for Christmas.
As I stood there choosing the perfect color and weight for each, I got thinking about my grandmothers and the mittens they made for my cousins and me when we were kids.
As we pass the next few weeks of the holiday season, I thought it might be fun to share some wintertime memories with all of you.
Like so many kids, I grew up wearing handmade mittens from my grandmothers.
My Gigi is the crocheter, and she had a crocheted mitten pattern that she used every year. She could start a pair of mittens after super and have them finished by the time my mom packed us up to head home. She was that fast. I would watch her rocking in her rocking chair with her crochet hook flashing in the glow of the gas lamps.
She didn’t even have to look down; her hands knew the way.
Now, like most young children, I had a penchant for losing mittens. I’d drop one on the walk home from school or lose one on the playground.
“Where are your mittens?” was probably my mother’s most commonly uttered phrase from November to March.
Gigi got wise to my absent-minded ways and deployed the ol’ mittens on a string trick. Many of you are nodding your head right now because you know what I’m talking about.
She would crochet a long chain of yarn connecting one mitten to the other; then, she would slip one mitten into one sleeve of my jacket and the other into the other sleeve of my jacket.
The mittens would dangle from the bottom of their respective armholes, ready to be slipped onto chilled hands.
But like most kids, I rarely put my mittens on. Why would I want to wear mittens when I could hold onto the strings and twirl them around in great circles. I would spin my mittens as if they were some fuzzy martial arts weapon.
Walking home from school, I was ready to defend myself from ninjas hiding in the bushes with one good whack of my mittens.
Of course, it didn’t take long before all of my amazing karate moves had the yarn stretched out, and so, by the end of December, my mittens would be dragging in the snow and slush behind me a good foot or so.
With a sigh of exasperation (a sound I’m all too familiar now that I’m a mother myself), my mom would cut the strings off of my mittens, and I’d lose one within a week.
It was never both of them; it was always one.
And that’s about the time that Grandma Besemer’s mittens would come in handy.
Grandma B. was a knitter, and she taught me to knit when I was seven years old. Every Christmas, Grandma Besemer would make mittens for all of her grandkids and great-grandkids.
This was no small feat. We’re a big clan. Grandma had six kids, and between them, there were a dozen grandkids and even more great-grandkids.
At the Besemer family Christmas, there were at least thirty pairs of handknit mittens under the tree every year.
I got thinking about my Grandma B. the other day and how many mittens she made in her lifetime. She was always knitting. No matter what time of year it was, Grandma had her needles in her hands.
I remember the stacks and stacks of handknit mittens she made to donate to the annual Christmas bizarre at her church. (This was along with all the baby and children’s sweaters too.)
I could spot a pair of my grandmother’s mittens on a classmate at school from a mile away.
I realized the other day how many hundreds of pairs of mittens my grandmother knit over the years, not just for her family but also for her community, and I’m utterly amazed.
She had to have knit mittens into the thousands. I wonder how many kids from my little hometown had a pair of her mittens growing up?
And I lost every single pair of mine as a child; what I wouldn’t give to have just one pair still.
Yet, as I sit in my own living room, knitting mittens for my children, which I know will get lost on the bus as well or dropped on the playground or in a parking lot, I keep knitting anyway as my grandmother did; the act of knitting as much a gift as the mittens themselves.
30 Easy DIY Stocking Stuffers That Everyone Will Actually Love
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Cheryl has put together a nice list of easy DIY stocking stuffers that folks will actually want to receive this year.
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13 Common Christmas Cactus Problems & How to Fix Them
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Christmas cactus have earned a reputation for being fussy, learn the most common problems that pop up with these plants, and suddenly they’re the easiest plants to take care of.
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7 Reasons To Grow Sphagnum Moss & How To Grow It
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Sphagnum moss is a great resource for the houseplant enthusiast. Learn to grow your own sphagnum moss without adding more damage to the fragile peat bog habitats.
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That's all for this week, Rural Sprout Readers.
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