Oh, Tamar, you
must try it. (That’s what everybody kept saying to me, and I kept resisting.)
Just type “wordle” into a search engine, and there it will be. I used a
completely new starter this morning – “triad” instead of “waste” or “waist”. The
thing (I feel) is to have a couple of vowels, and some common consonants. When
I worked on the Oberlin Review, back in the early years of the last century, it
was printed next door, hot-metal – presumably that’s gone altogether nowadays. When a
linotype operator made a mistake, he hit the first two columns of
letters on his machine, to fill up the now-useless slug. They were the first 12
letters of the English letter-frequency alphabet: ETAOIN SHRDLU. Who would have
thought they could have been of the slightest use, wedged in the memory 60
years later?
The important
thing the New York Times must understand, is that there is only one Wordle per
day. I did it in five today (one is allowed six, as a maximum), and could have eliminated one of my tries if I had been thinking properly.
I continue to feel
feeble, and my left hip is not much use. Not painful, but constantly
threatening to collapse beneath me. I had Daniela massage it this morning, and
feel somewhat better.
And I made my
decisions for Mary Lou’s “Aroon” pattern. I knit this sweater:
two years ago, and
still have a complete yellow skein left over. It comes from the Ginger Twist Studio,
near here. I probably have half-a-ball left over as well: I’ll have a look. It’s
a delicious yarn, no longer on Ginger’s list, but she offers a machine-washable
sock yarn now of similar properties and dimensions. I am sure there is a word
for this sort of yarn, a not-quite-solid solid colour, but I can’t think of it.
So, I’ll use the yellow for the contrast. I was seriously tempted to order grey
for the main colour, even a dark grey: babies dress like grown-ups nowadays. But
decided against it. I’ve ordered a darkish red: the colour of joy of more than
half the population of the earth (China and India, at least).
I also measured the Machu Picchu and discovered that it in fact needs a couple more inches before the armholes – I must have stopped because I had come to the end of a ball of yarn. So now I’ve wound the new ball and am knitting peacefully on for a couple of days, until the yarn for the Aroon arrives. Just what’s wanted.
Even though the house is stuffed full
of yarn, it is a matter of course that more must be ordered when one actually
wants to knit something.
At least yarn can be stored in all sorts of places. Timber is more of a problem - and it takes up more space. It is as well I do not have the capacity to take a photo and upload so that you can see what is still left in the Senior Cat's shed!!
ReplyDeleteI love Wordle. You play the one round for the day and that's it. I was upset to see that NYTimes had purchased it. I fear the pessimist side of me doesn't think it will be free for long. I have no regular words I play and will confess, I have resorted to Wordhippo to help me on occasion.
ReplyDeleteSemi solid, the description of the yarn dyeing.
ReplyDeleteCheers
I have seen semi-solid colours described as 'tonal' on some sites. Wordle had crept in here too, after some resistance.
ReplyDelete