Friday 18 April 2008

SHEEP OF THE WEEK



'Prick Your Finger' aims to offer knitters the chance to make ANYTHING, which is why we are learning about sheep breads.  Each sheep grows a different type of yarn. The letters on the front of our shop are knitted in one of the toughest, most weather proof wools, the ROUGH FELL. 
 My Cousins Kit and Alison, farm 70 Rough Fell ewes up in Cumbria. (Fell is another word for mountain, ewe - a female sheep) Like most farms in Britian, it is possible to break even but difficult to make a comfortable living, so they juggle the farm with other jobs. Kit and Alison farm for the love of nature.
Rough Fell roam on the open and bleak fells around south Cumbria. Farmers mark their sheep by painting spots on them, or tagging their ears and although the flock is free to roam, they usually remain together, socializing with other flocks on the mountain side. When it's time to go home, the farmers will go out on the fell and round them up with the help of a sheep dog.  
The 'Rough' was probably descended along with it's cousins the Scottish Blackface and the Swaldale, from a sheep called "Black faced Heath Breed' which was a common sheep around North England and South scotland for 500 years, with black face and legs and big curly horns and white wool. Rough has also been bred from  the toughest of all sheep, the Herdwick, which gives it the hardiness needed to survive the clashy. (Wet windy weather)
Kit gave me a book "Kendal Rough Fell Sheep" and I was delighted to read that Rough Fell farmers come from a long tradition of independent spirited communities, that is reflected in historical clashes with authority. In 1536 the common folk of Sedbergh and Dent (who farm Roughs) took part in one of the earliest up-risings against the church, the aristocracy, the king, and the associated systems of land tenure. These Rough Fell communities have formed unique ways of self government and decision making, and an unusual way of sheep farming which even to day does not fit in with the standard Defra guidelines. Defra forms might ask questions like 'When did the business start?', 'What is the post code?,' "What is the bank account?" or "Who are the legally empowered representatives?.' For farmers in remote parts, these questions, can be impossible to answer. 
Rough wool can also be difficult to sell to hand knitters, but we believe it is a useful yarn, and we never under estimate the imagination of  our hand knitters.... 


3 comments:

Felicity Ford said...

I can testify that the rough wool makes an excellent vegetable scrubber and is better than anything else I've found for stripping the mud from parsnips and carrots for a soup!

You can wash a scrubber knitted from Rough Fell in the washing-machine; if it fetls slightly it doesn't matter - in fact it makes your scrubber a bit hardier. Although some fibres do shed when scrubbing this has got to be better than the bristles or residue from petrochemically-based plastic bristles and a rough wool scrubber is a much prettier thing.

I love the Rough Wool but I wouldn't recommend it for knitted pants.

Felicity Ford said...

of course I meant felts not fetls - although I'm sure fetlsing is an excellent new craft if we could only understand what it is.

Anonymous said...

I wouldn't want rough pants either but I've found the Rough wool a marvelous exfoliator, and it could possibly increase circulation for a smooth finish on the bottom.