In general, it sucks when your husband lives 1200 miles away. Until yesterday it would have been hard for me to think of a real advantage to living away from B.
I'm genuinely glad he was not here to see this unloaded from the UPS truck.
It's yarn, all yarn. I told him it was coming, but nothing I said would have prepared him for the shock and awe that occurs when 70 pounds of fiber is delivered to your house. B, sorry if I didn't accurately describe the yarn supply, but say hello our new tenants, stacked several layers deep in the photo boxes below.
Over the holidays, my parents helped my grandmother clear out some of her fiber stash. I agreed to be its lucky recipient. Despite numerous conversations with several family members about the quantities of yarn to be sent, nothing could have prepared me for the magnitude of what was to come.
I'm really excited about the possibilities that lie in these boxes. At the same time, I'm also a little overwhelmed by all the possibilities that lie in these boxes.
It is clear that I need a new strategy for my latest stash addition. Following the first mini delivery on Thursday, I stuck a few cones in my bag before heading to the food co-op. I used the digital scales there to weigh my yarn, alternating with other customers weighing their bulk purchases of quinoa and carob chips. Somehow I don't see schlepping all of this to the grocery store as a viable way to weigh this much yarn.
My new approach sets a goal of cataloging one box per week in my Ravelry stash. At that rate, I should be done by the end of February, although early March might be a more realistic goal. I'll also be checking with the Weavers Guild to see if I can borrow a digital scale.
Does anyone have any suggestions or resources to help me in this endeavor? The yarn is in various states of labeling; some of it is a complete mystery to me. I've got the Knitters Book of Yarn, which is a start, but other ideas are welcome. Once I get organized I can actually start using it!