I finished
the tedious ribbing for the Milano at last, and started striping. I think from
here it will knit itself, as long as I pick it up from time to time, and keep
ahead of the game on skein-winding. Time to start thinking about the Shetland
projects.
General
remarks about Shetland
-- Ponies
abound.
-- But
Shetland sheep are harder to find. There are plenty of sheep, everywhere, but
they are mostly the sort of sheep you might see in Perthshire. They are largely
being raised for meat, we were told. Shetland sheep are a relatively small
breed and thus not ideal for that purpose.
They can be
recognised by their smallness, and by the fact that they come in all the
natural colours with the wonderful names – gaulmogot, katmullet, mooskit,
sholmit and shaela. We saw this flock near Burrastow.
So where
does Shetland yarn come from?
-- I don’t
think I saw any cultivated ground, except around houses, and less of that than
one would see elsewhere in the British isles . There
must once have been some sort of grain – for bannocks, and to provide straw for
thatching and bedding the cows; and root vegetables and kale.
-- We learned
at the Unst Heritage Centre (and you thought it was all lace knitting) about
the interesting structure of the island. In the dark backward and abysm of
time, the left-hand side of the island came from Connecticut
and the right-hand side from Siberia . I’m
sexing that up a bit, but you get the idea. The geology of the two halves is
quite different.
When we
left the Centre, we went on a little way to a point from which we could see the
Muckle Flugga lighthouse, as I have already mentioned. It is a splendid sight,
and I am grateful to Kristie and Kath for getting me there. When the
lighthouse-building Stevensons first saw that rock, they reported back that it couldn’t
be done. The authorities said, you’ve got to, so they did.
When one
looks south from that same vantage point, one sees a series of finger lakes –
is that the suture by which the island is stitched together? It was enough to
make one want to start life again and study geology.
I didn’t
take a picture, alas. Did you, Kath? I got this one from Google.
Finally,
here is a seagull in his Shetland sweater. I am told that this is how young
birds look. We are much plagued with seagulls in Drummond Place , but I have never seen one
like this.