kareina: (stitched)
First of all, I am really delighted with the weather we have been having lately. We have had six days in a row with temperatures below 0 C, and on Friday night/Saturday morning we got a couple of decimeters of snow, which, thanks to the nice weather, is staying nice and soft and fluffy and beautiful, and I am ever so much happier. This is so much better than the warm and rain we had for my birthday and the couple of days thereafter--it got so dark and dismal after the last of the previous batch of snow had melted away from the yard, fields, and forest (while leaving wet ice on all the roads and walkways). The Swedish weather service (via my phone app) says that we should have good temps for at least the next ten days (which is as far ahead as they predict), so it will be winter at least through new years. I hope it lasts longer than that, and I have started counting the number of days in a row we stay below zero.

Secondly, Frostheim Jul was fun! The hall was supposed to open at 11:00 for a crafts afternoon, followed by a potluck feast in the evening. I decided that we should bring the moraharpa, in addition to my hammer dulcimer and [livejournal.com profile] lord_kjar's nyckleharpa and violin, so Saturday morning while I was outside shoveling snow from the walkway onto the sledding hill (to make it bigger) he went downstairs and built new arms for the stand we had built for the cello last week so that the stand would hold the moraharpa (since changing that one would be much faster than building a whole new stand).

He was nearly finished with that when it was time to head to the hall (we had the key, so needed to be on time!), so he drove me and my stuff (crafts projects, hammer dulcimer, and food) over to the hall, then he returned home and finished up the project and then brought the rest of the musical instruments plus the four or five things I had thought of that I should have brought but didn't.

I was alone in the hall for a while, which gave me a chance to get my stuff unpacked and set up some tables for craft stuff, and then I was joined by the weaver I have become a patron for (I have bought so much of her tablet weaving) and her husband, and we had a delightful time chatting and working on projects for a while. Then I decided it was time to start my broccoli pie and went into the kitchen about the time that the fourth person arrived.

E. is a delightful person--I first met her a couple of years ago when I was one of the staff members to accompany the undergrad geology students to Cyprus. She was the only one of the students on that trip with whom I really clicked--she just seemed like the kind of person who would blend in with my group of friends. When we landed at the airport in Luleå and one of my friends picked me up I found out that, actually, she is friends with him and a bunch of other people I enjoy spending time with. Since then our paths have crossed a few times, and, when she joined a student club for fire dancing and they decided that they wanted to become jesters the group joined Frostheim to get help with costumes.

What I didn't know about her before this weekend is that in addition to common interests in gaming, geology, and medieval stuff, she is also a very talented musician. She has been playing clarinet since she was nine, and this summer while at the Visby Medieval Week she purchased a Renaissance style olive wood clarinet which has the sweetest sound. She had it along this weekend, and she, I, [livejournal.com profile] lord_kjar, and a couple of our other friends spent a good sized chunk of the day playing music together. For the songs I didn't know she would tell me a few notes to just play as accompanying cords or single notes, and it was so much fun. She is really interested in learning to play dulcimer, and she is a good enough musician that when I slid the sheet of paper under the strings to reveal which note was which she could play simple tunes right away. So we have planned that we will get together regularly come January for music lessons--she will teach herself to play dulcimer, and then teach me.

By late afternoon we had both the group of musicians at one end of the hall, and a group of crafters on the other--some people working on their own projects, others learning tablet weaving (from my weaver). Then, as time for the feast approached more and more people arrived. I forgot to actually count, but given that each table seats eight people we had to have had somewhere between 30 and 50 people on site for the feast (I am not certain if that count includes the kids, of whom there were at least seven of them who appeared to be having lots of fun running around).

The parents all packed up and took their little ones home fairly early, and when they started packing everyone else cleaned up too, which meant that we were ready to lock up the hall around 22:00. One of our friends, who lives a good hour or so north of here, had been enjoying some mead and had had enough that he shouldn't be driving, so I offered to drive him back to our place, where he could sleep over and head home the next day. He appreciated that--he had expected to sleep at the hall, like we did for Norrskensfest last month. I appreciated it to, since it meant we could put our chests and bags of stuff in his car, and the musical instruments in ours and get everything home in only one trip instead of two.

Sunday morning we hung out with him a bit, then had some time for projects before it was time to go to the airport to pick up our current houseguests--an old friend of ours who moved to Stockholm a couple of years ago, and a friend of his who is visiting from Colorado. They are out at another friend's house for a gaming session tonight, but we opted to stay home and relax.
kareina: (stitched)
Life has been delightfully pleasant--full but not hectic, with a bit of emphasis on music lately. I am now the person responsible for taking the photocopies of new sheet music for choir and typing the music into NoteworthyComposer to make midi files so that we can all listen to our parts and practice at home. I was really delighted when I found out that the midi files it exports come with text, and when one plays the midi there is a little blue box that highlights the syllable that goes with the note playing at the moment. This is fun, but a little challenging since I have no music training whatsoever, and my hearing is bad enough that I can't necessarily tell if it sounds wrong or not, so I need someone else to check my work before I can post the files to the choir web page. Since I am already doing this for choir I have also started doing this with things we want to do for our choir band, too.

I have also been making more time to practice playing my hammer dulcimer, and I bring it with us on alternate Monday evenings for the nyckleharpa night--then I play along for the few songs I know, and work on sewing projects while they are learning new stuff (since it takes the other 5 to 10 minutes to learn a new tune well enough to play along, and I can't play along till I have memorized every string I need to hit for that song, and that is a process that can take several weeks (though for one particularly easy song, which isn't done at the nyckleharpa nights, I managed it in only a couple of days). On Sunday we made it to the folk music session for the first time in ages, and I brought my Dulcimer there, too. It was fun. I still got in plenty of sewing time, but about every 20 minutes the circle came back around to my turn to pick, and I would suggest one of the few tunes I can play (I can play 8.5 songs now, 3.5 of which are Swedish Folk music and often come up on the Sunday sessions.)

My Swedish has been improving ever since C, our temporary housemate moved in. She is an SCA person from Goteborg who has a 2 month job in Luleå, so she asked on the Frostheim facebook page if anyone had a room available, and, since we got the guest room fixed up and usable this summer, we did. She is a delightful person to have around--she is a neat tidy person who cleans up after herself. She loves to cook, but the kitchen is always clean, just how I like it. She talks Swedish with me 98% of the time, which means that I am practicing lots more than I had been. The past few days I have been reading aloud to her and [livejournal.com profile] lord_kjar from the Swedish translation of Neil Gaiman's Odd och frostjättarna. The last time I attempted to read out loud from a Swedish book to [livejournal.com profile] lord_kjar he needed to correct my pronunciation at least once every sentence, and he only bothered to do so if I said a word so wrong it became another word or wasn't understandable at all. Now they are only correcting me once or twice a page, and then only for really hard words (go type "själ" into google translate and push the speaker symbol to hear what it sounds like).

This week the Uni had a free clinic for people with back or other pain could come in and be seen by a team of Master's students getting their degree in physiotherapy. Since I have been having an issue with some of the muscles in my back (along my spine, between the shoulder blade and my waist) knotting up while I sleep and hurting just enough to wake me, I made an appointment, and I am glad that I did. It hasn't been what one would call a problem (though I do miss being able to sleep deeply for a long time at a stretch) in that the pain would go away as soon as I woke up and started moving, but it was just annoying enough to make it worth replying to the email looking for people to come to the clinic.

It turns out that the muscles on the right side that are responsible for holding my scapula to my back are weak. I hadn't noticed the difference in strength from one side to the other, but when he had me hold my arm straight out in front of me and he pressed down on my arm I had no problems resisting with my left arm, but the right arm collapsed almost immediately. He has given me a few exercises to try to strengthen them and, with luck, the problem should go away. The pain area is the same spot that hurt when I hurt my back at fighter practice just over two years ago. I thought the problem had cleared up, but apparently I have been compensating with other muscles, and have done so for long enough that there are issues now. Oops. Makes me wonder why we don't go see a physiotherapist once every so often just for a check up--does anything need fine tuning? Imagine how bad off I would be with this issue if I didn't have the habit of daily yoga?

Moraharpa!

May. 2nd, 2014 09:53 am
kareina: (me)
One of the perks of living in Tasmania was getting to listen to the music of Harlequin and seeing the beautiful instruments that Harry made. I was especially enamored of his moraharpa:

Harry and his moraharpa

It is as beautiful to look upon as to listen to--he used Tasmanian Blackwood for the back key chest and keys (my favourite wood, ever), King Billy Pine for the sound board, and Myrtle for the sides.

Needless to say, when I saw over on FB that he had decided to sell that moraharpa I wanted it. Initially I wrote to him and said "if I get that job I just applied for, I will buy it". However, the more [livejournal.com profile] lord_kjar thought about it, the more convinced that we wanted to get it no matter what happens with the job. This morning Harry happened to be on line at the same time as I was, so we worked out the details, I have made payment, and he will ship it on Monday (it is already after the close of business on Friday there). I am sad that he won't have it any more, but so excited that we will--it really is the most beautiful moraharpa ever made!

Profile

kareina: (Default)
kareina

May 2025

S M T W T F S
     123
45678 910
11121314151617
1819 2021222324
25262728293031

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags