I resumed the Tokyo shawl yesterday,
with a bit of a blip. The pattern is of the simplest – k20, k2tog,
k48, yo; repeat that sequence once; k20. I lost a stitch somewhere,
and one of the curves of eyelets is somewhat out of whack. There is
the mildest of difficulties involved in the fact that alternate bands
are of reversed st st and that involves reversing the pattern –
k20, yo, k48, k2togtbl etc. I must keep at it this time until I have
really mastered it and I am sure it's safe to lay it aside.
And I must fit pocket squares into the
General Scheme of Things. Maybe weekends? The wedding is in
mid-September. I'd like to have them done by the end of May if only
to give Matt time to change his mind. About knitted pocket squares, I
mean, not about Hellie.
Back to Greece
On Tuesday we went to Corinth. Today's
pictures are my own.
We went to see, and to be the guests
of, an archaeologist friend of Greek Helen's, a lively woman nearly as old as I am. We started at the ruins
of the Temple of – oh dear, was it Poseidon? Her life work, and the
site of the ancient Corinthian Games.
Then on to the ancient harbour – it
must have been where St Paul landed; there is no other. It is, as you
can see, no-where's-ville, and all the more interesting for that.
The
shingle is liberally laced with pottery fragments, presumably
ancient. We picked up a few.
Then on to the main ruins of ancient
Corinth. Helen's friend was able to take us into a workroom where a
recently-excavated mosaic was being worked on, nothing desperately
distinguished but interesting for Helen (herself a mosaicist) to see it and to talk to the men who were working on it. That's her in the background.
Then the on-site museum. I wish we had
had Kaffe with us. He did a vest pattern using the border at the
centre of this mosaic. Where?
And we wondered how ancient spirographs
worked, exactly. We saw another one like this at the National
Archaeological Museum later in the week.
Then Helen's friend gave us a delicious
lunch at home with a view overlooking Mount Helicon. When she and her husband are in
Britain, they live at Glen Farg not far from Strathardle. They often
spend time in Kirkmichael.
Then we went out for coffee and
some souvenir-shopping.
I am envious - and enjoying the travelogue. Plus, I've spotted a couple of nice sweaters...
ReplyDeleteI am really enjoying your memories and the photos of your trip. Quite an inspiration.
ReplyDeleteYour posts and photos are an inspiration!
ReplyDeleteI have gone ahead and booked my own trip to Thessaloniki and Athens for early May.
Mosaics and museums here I come!
I did try to send Helen a message but I think my browser could not connect with her comment page.
LisaRR
I recognize that striped sweater. How nice to see it on you and looking so comfortable. Thanks for all the info and pictures; it's so nice to have you back!
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely chance, to have an insider view of ancient Corinth, from an archaeologist. Thanks for the mosaic pics, especially the "spirograph".
ReplyDelete- Beth in Ontario
What an energizing trip you had.
ReplyDeleteYour memories and the photos are really moving Greece up in my must-visit list.
ReplyDelete