I wound the yarn, I started the square, the final pocket square, the one for the bridegroom. It's looking good, with a double row of eyelets around the edge. I
did a practice square while I was in the hospital, probably a good
thing. It's all a matter of keeping one's wits about one. It's knit
corner-to-corner: so for the first half, two YO's mean I need one
decrease if I am not to increase too rapidly. And on the return
journey, two YO's will require three decreases. I should finish today or tomorrow.
I went to the new Schoolhouse website
yesterday and tried to order the Fair Isle Vest DVD and a couple of
books, but the site defeated me. At the end, when it came to
“Shipping Method”, the only option presented to me was “Ground”.
I chose it, perforce, although I know the Schoolhouse prefers air for
international orders, as do I. But it was no use, as the next message
was that the shipping method I had chosen wasn't available. I've
written to them and no doubt we will get it straightened out
eventually.
The reason I didn't order the pattern
is that, at the last minute, I found the issue of Knitter's which
contains it. I had put it away, along with the four issues from 2000
in which Meg re-visits the EPS, on top of the knitting books on a
shelf where there was a convenient slot. All I've got to do now, is
not forget again.
I am reading a book called “Counting
Sheep” by Philip Walling – highly recommended, although there's
no knitting in it and virtually nothing about Shetland. It's a
history of sheep in Britain, with lots of interesting information
about individual breeds and about life as a sheep farmer. You don't
want to know about fly-strike. The author used to be a sheep farmer
and later became a barrister.
Medical
I liked your anecdote about the
broccoli, Jean (comment yesterday). I don't entirely understand the
dietary restrictions that go with Warfarin. No alcohol (or, so little
one might as well not bother), no cranberry juice (they're very
emphatic about that), no grapefruit. So far, so good. Clear, simple.
But then there's a list of all the
foods that make up my diet: “Green leafy vegetables, chick peas,
mature cheese, liver, egg yolks, cereals containing wheat, bran and
oats, blue cheese, avocado and olive oil”. You don't have to give
them up, exactly, but “eating them in large amounts may lower your
INR result”.
When I was summoned back late Wednesday
afternoon for an injection because my INR result was low, I confessed
to the dr that I had eaten an avocado the day before. He seemed
relaxed about it. The thing to avoid is sudden, radical changes of
diet, like going paleo, he said. I might have another avocado today.
The other thing that worries my about
that list, is that I can't detect a common thread. They are all foods
containing Vitamin K which encourages blood clotting which, at the
moment, is what we don't want. But I can't see what sort
of food contains Vitamin K. If chick peas, what about other pulses,
for instance?
I
didn't have an INR test yesterday, just an injection. Today, both.
Except for olive oil and some coriander in the salsa verde,
I don't think I ate anything from the list yesterday. I am enjoying
myself eating a nearly vegetarian diet of things my husband wouldn't
like, and going to bed early. Enjoying it, perhaps, a bit too much.
Dear Jean, enjoy what you can while you can.
ReplyDeleteWarfarin is dosed based on your INR. So, as your physician says, it's not a matter of resiticting the leafy greens, etc from your diet. You just eat everything in the amounts you normally would. Then the INR levels out to what is normal FOR YOU. As long as you don't suddenly go on a fad diet of 10 cups of kale per day, you will be fine.
ReplyDeleteI put Counting Sheep on my list a while ago, but as the list gets longer I need reminders to see what is there and might be pulled to the surface. Your recommendations are always worthwhile, so thank you.
ReplyDeleteEww, fly strike. I had a ewe with that many years ago. Not too bad if you catch it early, as the maggots keep it cleaned of dead tissue as I recall. But yucky and gross to deal with. Possibly a metaphor for various life events.
ReplyDeleteCounting Sheep will be on my list too. And as to INR, I take my husband to have his checked today. That trip is straightforward but a production none the less.
ReplyDeleteCounting Sheep is very good.
ReplyDeleteDear Jean I caught up with your blog and am sorry to see that you've gone through so many health worries recently. But I'm glad to see that you're on the mend. As for the question about Vitamin K heavyweights, I've consulted a booklet written by a German Dr (Dr Inge Hofmann and Sonja Carlsson, published by Mosaik in 1998), so I'm delivering a transcript for the main 'offenders' and hope it helps. She bases the daily requirements for a healthy female adult at 60-65 micrograms. Vit K yields in foods are given in micrograms per 100g of each. kale 817, raw spinach 400, watercress 250, raw broccoli 205, raw white cabbage 145, lettuce 61, red cabbage 44. She also lists pulses as a good source of vitamin K, but isn’t specific about types or values, as well as rape and soy oils - again no specifics
ReplyDelete