Today we joined some friends and drove down to Monterey for the Monterey County Fair and Wool Auction. Actually, mostly for the Wool Auction, though appropriate fair food was also consumed (Noel: corn dog; me: funnel cake and cotton candy).
I loved this fleece, but it went for way more than I could have possibly afforded:
Also, looking at it, I realized that I really do not want massive amounts of coloured wool. This was light enough that it would dye decently, but still, being grey took some value off it for me, as lovely as it was.
Not that there was not plenty of fleece:
Anyway, for the next few hours I sat and followed along on my auction list while knitting away at my latest project, which is the Icarus Shawl that was in Interweave Knits a few years ago. It's a nice, mindless lace pattern for most of the shawl, so modulo needing to be able to count while the guy was calling all sorts of numbers out, I made decent progress.
(I'm knitting it in some laceweight hand-painted alpaca I bought a couple of years ago and wanted to use up. There's nowhere enough shawl to use all 2400 yards, but I have a sort-of plan for the leftovers.)
Fiber buddy hlf bought three fleeces, one of which we're splitting (um, I think it might be the one under her at this point; she was a little giddy). We dropped them all off to go to Morro Fleece Works. It will eventually be delivered around November or later.
I think I'll end up with a few pounds of pencil roving, which is nice and easy to spin. Although I am happy with the fleece and excited about getting the end result, the drawback to buying at auction is that prices are very high (in auctions, the winner always ends up paying more than the object is worth because by definition nobody else was willing to pay that much). I think I like events like the Spinning at the Winery day better; the pressure is lower and the prices are better.
After the auction, we had lunch then made a brief tour of the livestock pavilion. This sweet grey alpaca flirted with us when it kind of looked like we might have edibles in our bags (if we did, the alpaca wasn't getting any).
And then the long drive home in the usual terrible Sunday traffic. I forgot how backed up it gets even on 101 coming North. I was always driving against it back in the school days; Noel was the one who'd get hit with that stuff coming back from a weekend with me in SLO.
I was intrigued by this place:
I guess they had really sold out, then.
Technorati Tags: county fair, crafts, knitting, lace, spinning
I would just love to learn to spin. I'm actually thinking about getting a couple sheep in a year or two, for grazing... how much would a fleece sell for? I'm trying to decide whether I'd rather have fleece to spin/sell, or goats to milk. Though at least shearing you only have to do once a year! :)
A fleece might go for between $10 and $300, depending on quality and size ($5 to $30 per pound, with a sheep producing between 3 and 10 pounds of usable wool depending on any number of variables). The best fleeces are from sheep that are jacketed (they wear little coats to protect the fleece).
A bad fleece won't sell at all, and will drag down the value of your good fleeces if you try to sell it.