Today was a very busy day. Those orange mushrooms in their own fairy garden that I showed you yesterday were calling to me. I was so afraid the weather would change again and I would be unable to harvest them and turn them into dye....so after supper I went out with my stroller (to keep me upright!), a cardboard box, a 5 gallon paint strainer bag, and a pair of garden gloves that I put on before I picked even one mushroom.
Since I do not know specifically if these mushrooms are safe to handle, I felt very strongly about not touching them. When I got to the lawn I found that multiple mushrooms had already started molding and going by. I did not collect them. I will let them go back into the ground from which they sprang.
Even though these mushrooms are on our own lawn, I still did not harvest them all. When I had about as many as I though I should collect, I went back into the house, emptied one of our dye pots--a nice stainless steel pot with a glass cover that is ONLY USED for dyeing, even though it is only natural dyestuffs I am currently using--and after cleaning the pot I filled it about 2/3 full of water then set the bag of mushrooms into the water and set the burner heat to medium low, covered the pot, then went to my wonderful VERY elderly blue platform rocker to do some knitting for a while. (After about four rows I realized that I had forgotten that I was supposed to be decreasing every other round. Rats! So I took out those rows and decided to check the dye pot until I recovered my equanimity after that faux-pas...)
The wool fiber I used to put in the pot as a sample was 5.6 grams of Lonk Wool. Yes, Lonk! Look it up. ("The Lonk is a British breed of domestic sheep. It belongs to the group of black-faced hill breeds of northern England.)".
This is the pot with the paint strainer bag and in the top of the pot, that little non-bag hump-y looking thing is the fiber. I repeat: I look forward to the morning.
On a totally other subject: today I was serving with a friend in the FamilySearch Center. I spent most of my time learning rather than forwarding our family history. I started with the front page of The Family History Guide. There are a number of short videos that I watched then moved on to click on a link, then another, then another. THERE IS SO MUCH THERE! (Actually thousands of articles and links, etc) If you think you don't know enough about doing family history research, this is the website for you. If you think you know all there is to know about doing family history work, this website is for you! You are wrong! There is so much more. SO MUCH.
I won't tell you about what I learned because it is all still swirling around in my brain. Suffice it to say that this website is a wonderful blessing to everyone who goes to it...from the rankest beginner, even if you have not even begun family history work...on up to the most certified credentialed researcher. Later on this year I believe we will begin holding The Family History Guide workshops...not classes because no one can know all that is there. We will work on family history together starting with projects and goals, and moving on one step at a time.
That is it for today! Mushroom dyeing and The Family History Guide! Two very different things but both a big part of this day.
Best wishes to all.
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