Life as a Spectator Sport

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Sunday, March 20, 2005

Domestic labor

There is this about electricity-guzzling labor saving devices: they do save labor. It's a lot easier to throw a load of clothes into the dryer than to walk out in the back yard with a heavy basket and the bag of clothespins. On the other hand, that makes you a lot more aware of the cost of your labor saving devices.

There is a rhythm to manual labor, not just each individual task itself, but the aggregate of all of them. Making bread every other day, mayonnaise once a week, soap twice a year. Doing the laundry on Saturday mornings, a pattern I remember distinctly from childhood. You schedule the rest of your life around these things. If I could spend more time at home right now, we'd have animals to feed each morning and evening, eggs to gather, milking to do. As things are, processing honey in the fall, and ripe produce between now and then, is as much as I can take on.

I did buy about twenty pounds of Rambouillet fleece from Lisa, which I'll wash this afternoon. I've never processed a fleece from sheep to yarn, so this will be a new experience, and our first use of the outdoor washing-up facilities. I am not going to put that amount of lanolin (which is technically a wax, not oil or grease) into my septic tank by washing the fleece in the house—I cringe at the descriptions of people washing fleece in their automatic washing machines!

Some hand-spinners spin "in the grease" (that is, without removing the lanolin first), and I may try that someday, but I'd like to recover the lanolin to use it in soap-making. So we'll carry very hot water out to the big washtub in the back yard, soak the fleece in net lingerie bags, and pour off the water into an old garbage can. Hopefully, the lanolin will congeal on top of the water, just like grease rising to the top of the stew pot. The fleece will get washed again in hot water, with soap added this time, and whatever lanolin is left in it will just have to stay.

Off to pick up the dog!
posted by Liz @ 9:33 AM     |


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