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July 11 2010

planetveganscotland
09:45

orkney redux

we went back to orkney (again) last week. this time, with j’s mother, sister, sister’s boyfriend, and three dogs. we kept our visits to the main tourist attractions (skara brae, maeshowe, broch of gurness, tomb of the eagles) down and instead spent a lot of time on the dramatic coastlines watching for puffins, and mostly spotting fulmars and razorbills!

yesnaby:

•the yesnaby coastline looking to marwick head•

•the orkney coastline is peppered with all these amazing flowers that grow out of scree•

birsay:

•a view of the tidal causeway to mainland orkney from the brough of birsay

•jumbled-up norse & pictish settlements on the brough of birsay•

•seabird cliffs on the brough of birsay•

•the barony mills in operation•

•vintage flour sacks•

•the drying floor (there’s a beautiful old kiln directly below that smells of woodsmoke)•

•outside the barony mills•

deerness:

•the covenanter’s memorial near mull head•

bog cotton – not as spinnable as it looks on account of the fragility of its fibres•

•the gloup, a collapsed sea-cave that looks better the rougher the sea is, but looks amazing anyway•

marwick head:

•me wearing dutch world cup orange (hey, it’s worked so far – we’re in tonight’s final) in front of the kitchener [stitch] memorial

•abandoned boat winches by the fisherman’s huts along the west coast•

stenness:

•the bewitching ring of brodgar, one of those incredible stone circles we’re so lucky to have in abundance•

south ronaldsay:

•photo of the holiday: j’s boardshorts have “here comes the sun” printed on the waistband and he was trying to put them on in the car while the rain pelted down outside… welcome to scotland!•

bay of firth:

•this was the view east as i was eating breakfast at 5am yesterday morning before catching the 6:30 ferry back to the scottish mainland for an 8-hour drive back to edinburgh, from where i caught a train to glasgow and arrived home in time to see the first uruguayan goal of an eventful third-place play-off that germany eventually won – phew!•

i’m working on some orkney-themed socks at the moment, which i fully intend to post something more about by the end of this week. however, there is the more pressing issue of a Very Important football match tonight that i now owe my heritage to spend a significant part of the day working towards. if you have access to a screen, you may want to watch history being made tonight (no, i’m not being over-confident. even if we lose, spain will still win the world cup for the first time ever, so it’s history no matter the outcome!)… let’s hope it’s a beautiful game.


June 22 2010

planetveganscotland
11:32

visit crieff, buy dress

so, j had a conference in crieff yesterday and my manager gave me the day off to go with him. i’d never been to crieff before! we hired a car for the trip because crieff takes about 4 hours to get to by public transport, and it was a nasty little budget-line peugeot 107 with tacky trims that are styled to look like more than cheap plastic. apparently it’s 95% recyclable. whether it Gets recycled or not is a different matter!

crieff itself was a bit of a let-down. the conference was at the hydro, which is one of those beautiful old hotels that you can imagine the crème of scottish society retreating to in the good old days. now, it’s one of those overly-fancy places with a big lobby, luxe modern fittings, a cloakroom, hand cream in the bathrooms, and valets. i had a wee chat with one of the housekeeping staff and they let me look around a bit – the rooms were tiny and bland. in fact, if it wasn’t for the spa, gym, tennis courts etc, you may as well be staying in a travelodge!

the town centre almost exclusively consists of a high street. but it’s not a wide and free-flowing high street like the ones you find in the scottish borders or west country of england. instead it’s narrow and pokey. however, if you ever find yourself in crieff, may i recommend king street? it’s home to green days, damson and delivino. three thoroughly modern establishments that evoke a sense of what crieff was like in its heyday.

there’s also a brand-new gem on the high street. called ‘an cnoc’ after the hill that towers over the town and offers splendid views, mandy moore has turned a somewhat neglected unit into a beautiful shop showcasing handcrafted items from craft fairs and makers’ markets in perth & kinross, and beyond. a knitter and felter herself, she either buys items or arranges a commission agreement with the maker. nothing in her shop is unsympathetically displayed and she shows a genuine interest in and knowledge of her stock.

there are also charity shops/op shops/thrift stores, whatever you call them. yes there are. they’re not great, but there is always a sneaky wee gem to be found:

namely, a lined grey-navy cotton dress with 4 architectural pockets for the measly sum of £4. and all four pounds go to a cambodian orphanage. awesome and virtuous!

oh, and did you notice that i’ve not blogged a single word about the world cup? it’s a concerted effort. sometimes, there’s just so much to say. frequently, though, in this particular tournament, i’ve been caught speechless.


June 08 2010

planetveganscotland
15:34

bonn voyage!

i had a lot to write, so i’ve just copied-and-pasted what i wrote on my work blog:

I’ve just arrived back from an international meeting in Germany with Young Friends of the Earth Europe (Young FoEE) members from six countries. We were based at a climate camp taking place alongside the UNFCCC Bonn Climate Change Talks. The camp was run by Klimawelle (climate wave) and acted as a meeting point and resource for activists. People from all over the world used it as a base to plan actions, share skills, make activist art, discuss ideas, and live together in a communal, nurturing space for a few days.

The main objectives of the Young FoEE meeting were to discuss the year so far, and to share our plans for the rest of the year. We have lots of exciting campaigns and actions to roll out over the next six months, so watch this space!

On Friday, Young FoEE were part of a coordinated action outside the Hotel Maritim, where the negotiations are taking place, in support of the Cochabamba People’s Agreement, which is not on the agenda for discussion in spite of its widespread support among many country delegations. We also delivered a workshop at the Klimaforum Bonn entitled “Building a youth movement for climate justice: tools, techniques and tactics for a just future” where we sought to build a common understanding of Climate Justice, share activism stories and successes, and feed our outcomes back to the youth movement. We had 20 young people attend from different countries and organisations, and hope that they all benefited from the session in some way. If you would like a copy of the notes from the workshop, please email youngfoe@foeeurope.org

As well as information and skill sharing with other young people, we also contributed to a day of action alongside NGOs and people’s movements from Germany, Europe and beyond.

Beginning with a coal protest coordinated by BUND (Friends of the Earth Germany) and Attac Deutschland (German Attac) outside the Hotel Maritim, we moved onto a march that was more like a carnival procession than any other mass demonstration I’ve been at. This was in large part thanks to Rhythms of Resistance, an eclectic samba band whose mission is to fuse militant and creative forms of resistance. Artists at the climate camp had also spent the entire week trying to motivate campers to produce an array of banners and flags to wave along the way, and many demonstrators wore t-shirts printed with techniques we had shared in the camp’s creative spaces.

A group of organisations arranged a Reclaim the Streets party to follow this colourful demonstration, and a coordinated action resulted in blockading a petrol station and multistorey carpark in central Bonn. Banners saying “Total = Aral = Shell = BP” connecting general fuel consumption to the Deepwater Horizon disaster, while more banners demanded “System Change not Climate Change”. Testament to the success of this message was an announcement from the petrol station owner that he supported our action and was happy not to have any business all day because of it. So, Rhythms of Resistance drummed their hearts out, Food not Bombs Düsseldorf fed us all in their inimitable style, and everyone ate and danced and chatted like sitting on the white lines in the middle of the road was something we do every weekend. Even a senior policeman came over to check we were all having a good time and express public support for our campaign, saying he hoped we would make the national media that day.

So, those were the highlights of my trip to Bonn with Young FoEE. It was all work, and I arrived home from my 18-hour journey by bus and train exhausted, but our work can be creative, noisy, sociable and joyful, too. We are, after all, fighting for everything that is good about our planet.


May 05 2010

planetveganscotland
14:19

awesome, this

“Do not burn yourselves out. Be as I am – a reluctant enthusiast….a part-time crusader, a half-hearted fanatic. Save the other half of yourselves and your lives for pleasure and adventure. It is not enough to fight for the land; it is even more important to enjoy it. While you can. While it’s still here. So get out there…and mess around with your friends, ramble out yonder and explore the forests, climb the mountains, bag the peaks, run the rivers, breath deep of that yet sweet and lucid air, sit quietly for a while and contemplate the precious stillness, the lovely, mysterious, and awesome space. Enjoy yourselves, keep your brain in your head and your head firmly attached to the body, the body active and alive, and I promise you this much; I promise you this one sweet victory over our enemies, over those desk-bound men and women with their hearts in a safe deposit box, and their eyes hypnotized by desk calculators. I promise you this: you will outlive the bastards.”

an edward abbey quote lifted off rob edwards’ homepage. cheers, rob, it’s awesome.


January 17 2010

planetveganscotland
12:01

CO: a little slice of summer

hooray for new socks! i took a break from the vegan sock KAL to finish off this pair that had been lingering on the needles from before i did my mad gift-knitting dash before xmas. they're the dead simple lace socks (rav) from wendy's socks from the toe up:

the yarn is tencel laceweight 2-ply from yarntopia treasures (etsy), held double with the colour repeats matched up. and what amazing colours they are. it's the tequila sunrise colourway, and consists of bright yellow, orange and coral. it didn't pool at all, instead just forming really delicate single stripes of colour. and it's only $9 per skein, so super-value.

knitting from the toe up is just genius! as i was knitting the foot, it became clear that these were going to be short summer socks, rather than longer ones. i'd planned for them to have a ribbed cuff, but it just didn't work with the yarn and pattern, so i followed the picot bind-off instructions from aleta fera's 'vog on! socks (rav) off knitty.com and i'm really happy with the results.

wouldn't have happened with cuff downs...

listening: spotify... oh.my.god!
reading: love to knit socks by bronwyn lowenthal. got it out of the library for the sake of a couple of designs. it's ok, but the internet is better!
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