Fire in the Landscape

Today, the 416 fire north of Durango has doubled in size to 16,000 acres.

It’s that time of year again. Fire season has come early to Pagosa country this year. I started to write this as Archuleta County enacted Stage 1 Fire Restrictions and campgrounds opened at the beginning of May—the earliest we can remember for restrictions. Usually primitive campers, we camped for the first time in a local paid campground so meals could be cooked over a small campfire or in the dutch oven.

We often snowshoe through William’s Creek campground in the winter when no one is there or have parked and sled the dogs on the road, back in the good old days. Seeing it without the snow, I was impressed by the size of the campground and the number of sites with primo creek access. This early in the season, we had our pick.

Williams Creek Campground snowshoeing January 25, 2015 and camping May 5, 2018

Stage 2 restrictions were in place by the end of Memorial day weekend. Along the lines of more earliest-year-ever, we headed to our favorite spot up Mosca for the long weekend. This road isn’t often open/passable this time of year. We had to dig out the propane Coleman stove and change our meal plan as there were no fires allowed in primitive camping under Stage 1. Even at the end of the road, a PFPD patrol passed us, a welcome site.

Preferring to cook over our Trangia, which is not permitted now under the Stage 2 restrictions, we’re looking at adding a new stove option, as we love the convenience of cooking over denatured. The difference in a new stove, would be one with a valve that would meet with the more strict restrictions. Something we may have to consider as we think about a long-haul summer trip to Alaska. What if you’re passing thru an area with Stage 2 restrictions, and ya gotta cook ramen for the night? Doubt it’s a necessity. I’d eat a sandwich; but what if you’re in it for the long haul?

For now, we just aren’t camping. We stay home and daydream about camping by writing this blog…I digress.

Now they’re talking Stage 3, closure. This is unprecedented for the Pagosa Ranger District.

Durango 416 Fire approx. 4–5 hours after ignition. June 1, 2018 driving east on 160 leaving Durango (left), from our front porch (right).

We’re no strangers to fire in the landscape. Our first full summer here was 2002, when the Missionary Ridge fire rained needle ash on us, and the Million Reservoir fire forever changed the landscape. We wondered what we had traded the tornadoes of Arkansas for.

In 2012, the Little Sand Fire left an amazing scar that we wonder at every time we drive up Mosca. The West Fork Complex dominated the skyline in 2013 and terrified me the most.

Westfork Complex pictured from June 19–Jul 3, 2013

Literally watching from our front door in 2015, we observed aircraft dropping retardant and smoke jumpers being dropped on what I think was dubbed the Little Devil Fire.

Little Devil August 2015

We were detoured on our trip of the National Parks when a fire closed the highway in Yellowstone in 2016 and were on our way to Durango the morning #416 began nine days ago.

Driving through the Berry Fire burn scar about 2 weeks after it closed the highway between Teton and Yellowstone.

BTW, one of the best resources for local fire information is KSUT’s Wildfire Resources page.

West Fork Complex burn scar above Big Meadows Reservoir July 2015

It’s heartbreaking to see your favorite places first die off in painful ways, slowly or suddenly as beetles and drought do their work. It is scary when those place dissolve to ash. Yet we’ve seen them afterwards, skeletal remains standing where they flourish on the edges as things start over again. Usually these are the best places for wildflowers and berries, which means wildlife.

Recommended reading, Fire Season: Field Notes from a Wilderness Lookout by Philip Connors. We first found this book in Durango at Maria’s bookshop—need to restock this one in my library.

Overnight with friends at the Jersey Jim Fire Tower August 2016

Celebrating 15 Years of Subalpine Design

Happy Birthday to us… it’s hard to believe that Subalpine Design is 15 years old this year!

GROWING
It has been an incredible and dynamic journey that continues to amaze me in its evolution. When I began this business in partnership with my husband, I was working only in print design, full time for a fairly large, international company. The president of the company asked the graphics dept who wanted a side-job? I raised my hand and began to learn what it means to be self-employed and maintain an LLC.

MEASURING
Over the years, the work has ebbed and flowed depending on the projects and many other factors including networking, the economic climate, skill sets, and availability. Because I like to actually work with people in person, opportunities often opened by Subalpine Design became priorities to work for local retailers, businesses and non-profits or volunteering while Subalpine sat more idle. My husband’s participation has changed from year to year as well, but it is his full time employment that has afforded us the opportunity to experiment with Subalpine Design.

FORKS IN THE TRAIL
We thought I needed to branch more into web design in 2007 when a fellow designer introduced me to WordPress and everyone who wanted a logo was looking for a website, too. That demand hasn’t changed much. It was a challenge to develop custom WordPress theme designs and broaden our clientele outside of the local community. It wasn’t until 2016 when I started to realize how far off track I’d gone. I haven’t taken on a new web project since.

SURVEY & REORIENTATE
The landscape of web management was always beyond my capacity or desire to maintain, and mobile development has taken the lead. In the world of tech, you so quickly lose it if you don’t use it and continue to upgrade it. Defining my recent role on a software team, reaffirmed  strengths in the design, layout, mock-up, wire-frame, UX side and moved me further away from the technical, developer side.

RETRACING MY STEPS
I have been slowly turning the boat around, so to speak, changing course to re-examine Subalpine’s roots in a way. In retrospect, I’ve found some interesting areas to critique. Subalpine Design hasn’t lived up to its greatest potential. Not that we do a bad job. I think you’ll find our clients more than satisfied and if anything desiring for us to expand our services.

A large part of the problem seems to be that I’ve focused too much on adapting for them and not applying that knowledge to Subalpine Design. This company often doesn’t get the attention it deserves because we’re fulfilling client needs and balancing it with personal ones. It wasn’t until 2010 when we launched this website. It’s not hard to get stuck or distracted, unable to establish any goal.

I can wear a lot of hats and it’s taken some experience to know which ones I should wear for other people. There’s one client who might like it if I morphed into a React developer, another an SEO specialist, everybody needs sys admins…

THE PATH AHEAD
I used to think I could do it all, if I desired. These days I realize as long as I am working for myself, it’s best to identify my strengths and pursue that which fuels my passion, while tempering it with a dose of reality. Our mission has always been to help people through DESIGN.

I’ve been carving out some personal time to research ideas that could take the business in a more artistic direction, while continuing to support design clients. I’ve been afraid in the past to tread the path I’m exploring now, and am still trying to figure out why. I think I’ve been skeptical of standing out in the ‘global’ market of the web and figuring out how to leverage the right tools without compromising my values, deciding if it’s worth the effort without knowing the return. At times I’ve been uninspired. It seems when I get an idea I want to nurture, other projects and priorities begin to appear. The next step begins by showcasing and continuing to refine skills in illustration and photography. We’ll see where Subalpine leads us next.

Taking Care of Business

I’ve been reflecting and have found the time to recap some of the things I worked on in 2017, filling in some of the gaps. So far it’s been about crafting and volunteering.

From a Business Perspective, I’m proud to report 2017 was one of the most profitable for Subalpine Design; and the first Quarter of 2018 has stayed on trend. It all boils down to opportunities and relationships, the synergy of orbits colliding and helping each other along. A good spoonful of motivation hasn’t hurt.

You can never go home again? Subalpine Design pulled our roots in closer last year and transplanted ourselves from our office in Aspen Village back home. It had been growing more convenient to meet in-person clients in places of their choosing. Most of our business transpires over the web. Developments in cellular tech and connectivity are paving the way for more mobility; and there are ideas to work from the road and eventually expand the home office.

A substantial portion of our time went to working with my husband’s employer, Rydin Decal, to redesign their parking permit software. It’s not something I can share the designs on. It’s been a heck of a learning curve. I’ve not always faced the challenges well. I’ve dipped my toes into the realms of SCRUM and Agile development; been exposed to new modalities to communicate and document; reverted to fewer alerts and distractions to try to root; and metamorphosed through my technical skills to come back to my most valued work is communicating graphically.

While I appreciate the access of working with the Product Owner, one-on-one in most of my other projects, I miss and am challenged by the exposure to many points of view by working in a team. I quickly learn where my edges are and which ones I’m willing to push. Evolution is not always beneficial. If given the choice and ability to envision the outcome, sometimes we choose not to adapt. Sometimes our endurance comes from recognizing and refocusing on our strengths.


There were local relationships expanded with projects like Four Ravens Farm’s logo and label design. Look for their honey, jams, soaps and more handmade goodies at the Pagosa Farmer’s Market.

I also attribute Subalpine’s bounty to dedicated and dynamic partners like Red Silk Essentials. Cindy continues to push the possibilities while respecting my boundaries. We collaborate well. She’s allowed me a lot of artistic free reign with her brand, while maintaining her vision. We recently went through a wordpress theme redesign, that from the technical perspective of cloning and upgrading an active site with its database and files went smoother than anticipated.

There were several other projects from cultivated partnerships that have contributed. I was able to lay out a few CD covers for my good friend Mark, and continued to support a community of entrepreneurs: Art & Framing Center of Pagosa Springs, Stephanie Morrow, Synergy Support Systems, Santa Fe Classic Limo, Alpine Leadership and Margit Deerman.

Since 2016, I’ve been transitioning the scope of the company away from web design and back to where I feel my strengths lie in graphic design, while continuing to support a handful of clients with their existing sites. I do like coding css and basic html and am thinking a post on my Tech journey might be next.

On the other side of the spectrum, with all the fun I’ve been having with fonts and remembering how much I like typography, I’m slowly finding some time to play with hand lettering. Subalpine has also expanded our toolbox over the last few years to include more tablet options, with the intention to start a regular digital sketching practice. No examples to share just yet…

Conserving the Best of The Rockies

Lest you think it’s all arts and crafts these days, I dedicated a good part of my Spring and Fall of 2017 teaching Environmental Education to Kindergartners-Fourth Graders.

Not so many years ago when I worked for the Southwest Land Alliance, I met and worked with Mrs. Hershey, the landowner and amazing conservationist who granted an easement on her property and fostered this Audubon program. In a small town, the connections were deeper than that; and over time and space, became more distant than ever.

In too short a time, I’d forgotten about the educational program that was being developed at the same time I helped conserve other properties, nearby.  I had a zen moment [they call it a flashback] of the ED of the Land Trust hiking along with me on those very trails, and saying that someday, maybe I’d be back to share my knowledge of the San Juans with its Youth.

Over a decade later, I did volunteer and become an Environmental Educator; and it reconnected me with my Community in a way that I think I’ve needed for a long time. Unfortunately, I returned too late to rekindle a relationship with Mrs. Hershey who has passed on; but her memory and vision are alive and well on the Ranch.

I’d like to remind everyone that there are MANY worthy causes in YOUR community in need of your talents.

Audubon Rockies – Environmental Ed Program
http://rockies.audubon.org/four-mile-ranch

Four Mile Ranch Conservation
http://rockies.audubon.org/conservation/four-mile-ranch

Southwest Land Alliance
https://www.facebook.com/SouthwestLandAlliance/

What Up My Knittas?

It’s true. As I said in my last post, I don’t stand still, although I do spend plenty of time on the couch, not idle by any means. So many breakthroughs in textiles over the last year, and not enough time to make notes of it all. Here’s a detailed roundup! And there were so many more…

Most of my yarn comes from my ‘local’ store, yarn Durango. Some, where noted, come from my travels and other places, like yada yada yarn in Silver City, NM.

My First Knit

…that I teased to in the Textile post, turned into this wardrobe staple the Turquoise Cowl, and gave me the confidence to tackle so much more.
Pattern: Very Gifted Cowl
Yarn: 2 skeins Katia Cotton Merino in Turquoise (yadayada)

Tsunami Shawlette

I wanted to make something for my mom. I wanted something in blues, and something for someone who has wool allergies. I chose this yarn because its palette reminded me of a shirt I thought I remembered her wearing, and it’s a cotton viscose blend. It cascaded into so much more for me in my first lace-work shawl. I learned how important it can be to go backwards in order to move forwards.
Pattern: Rising Sun
Yarn: 1 skein ea Araucania Yarns Alumco (Mapuche word for ‘a reflection on the water”) in Aqua Pura and Florida Blues, hand painted cotton viscose blend

Cobalt Kerchief

In the category of need to snap a completed pic, the Cobalt Kerchief, was a quick crochet; and one of the only crochet projects I’ve completed ‘recently.’ Reminded that the different techniques (crochet vs. knit) use different hand positions, which stretch different muscles. One of the reasons I took up these hobbies was to give myself ‘exercises’ for my hands that spend too much of the day on the keyboard.

I love this blue. I thought this might be a yarn for my mom at the time, until I found the one above.
Pattern: Lost in Time
Yarn: 1 skein Madeline Tosh Hand Dyed Yarns DK Twist in Fathom, and two small, partial skeins from Cat Mountain Fiber Arts Fusion 500 Worsted in Black & Tan

Wood Nymph Poncho

Continuing in the category of need to get a better pic…

I’ve added beaded Turkey Feathers to this, and you can tell that the large photo on the left is blown out by the sun (tried to color correct it). Most of the time, I think it looks more in the cooler, blue-gray tones you see from the original skeins on the right, matching the iridescence of the dark turkey feathers..
Pattern: Syncopated Stardust Cowl
As Sarah, the pattern’s designer, mentions straight off the bat, this is more of a recipe than a pattern. I didn’t have continuous, variegated yarn, so I made the stitch changes when I felt like it (usually about half way through one of the skeins). I also had just finished my first lace-work shawl so threw a couple of lace openings into some of the fluffy rows. I made up a pattern for the next to the last row that looks like a chain. I also knew I wanted to add some leaves and found this Kudzu shawl for inspiration. I didn’t do a good job of integrating the leaves into the recipe; so there is a bit of a weird gap in the pattern on the front of my poncho, less noticeable now that I’ve added the turkey feathers.
Yarn: Cat Mountain Fiber Arts Fusion 800 Fingering in Wood Nymph
I loved working with Cat Mountain’s Fusion yarns! Includes some neat specialty textures I might not normally have bought on their own.

Flicker Socks

My first pair of socks! So proud. And comfy. Looking forward to wearing these, which are the most recent project to come off the needles (days old).

I’ve sold and worn some great socks working in Outdoor Retail a good part of my life. These days I find they constrict more than I like, especially around my calves. Looking forward to testing out hand/custom-made. Certain there will be no turning back.

These and a quick scarf with scraps to learn about cables (and inspire imagining about stranding/color-work/tweed); were ‘test’ projects for something about to be cast on…read on to see what’s on the needles.

Sock pattern: By the Seine River
Yarn: 1 skein Araucani Yarns Huasco Sock in Capuchinbird, hand-painted superwash wool blend (yadayada)

Scarf pattern: Cable Scarf
Yarn: Lion Brand Fisherman’s Wool from Amazon and an array of scrap colors

Kid Creations

Many good friends were gifted with children last year. I took it as a great opportunity to have fun crocheting on a smaller and more adorable scale. When the first couple said they were calling the unknown child their ‘little Bear,’  I had the great idea to add bear ears to the newborn pattern I’d found. And when another two couples announced their conceptions, a trout theme and dog/wild thing were natural inspiration that fit the families.
Pattern: The Parker Crochet Diaper Cover – Additional links to the entire set can be found there as well.
Ears, paw pads and tail were crocheted ad hoc and attached.

For the trout applique, I found a photograph already grid-ed in a google image search. I kinda just free-form crocheted starting at the top of the tail, working down and then running around the perimeter a few times with solid blue. Eyes, mouth and fin embellishments were added embroidery style.
Yarn: Approx. 2 skeins per newborn set Classic Elite Yarns Liberty Wool Prints (bear & dog), or 1 skein Berroco Comfort Yarn in Antipasto (trout); embroidery floss (trout applique)

Beach Skirt

This is my beach skirt because I started crocheting it on my first trip to Santa Rosa Beach and got to wear it completed the following year in a return visit. While I usually wear it with a short, nude slip (bought specifically for this skirt), I imagine wearing it as a quick bikini cover-up (if I were somewhere warm enough for bikinis).

It has a tie to cinch the waist and also has buttons down the back. I need to take more photos. I exercised a fair amount of patience when the skirt sat finished for a month or more, waiting to find the perfect buttons. yarn Durango did not disappoint. They are beautiful orange ovals that match the yarn with carved filigree to give them some style and texture.
Pattern: Blue Dream
Yarn: 1 skein ea Theodora’s Pearls Auxanometer bamboo in Terracotta, Copper and Blueberry

Tree Cookie Deco

I hope to keep on the writing trend and share some of the other things I did in 2017 specifically, volunteering as an Environmental Educator with Audubon Rockies at the Four Mile Ranch.

For name tags during the program, children and adults are encouraged to wear ‘tree cookies.’ Upon orientation, you’re invited to decorate your cookie. My drawing inspiration was lacking that day.

After reading a review and purchasing Sasha Kagan’s book, Crochet Inspiration, I played with several projects using embroidery floss. On a whim (memories of decorating my name tag at Governor’s School in pogs), I attached the rose and a violet (on the back) and have received many compliments from young & old alike.

The Vintage Sweater

My second knit project was an ‘oversized’ sweater that was even more odd when I subbed acrylic for alpaca and learned about textures, suppleness and that not every thread is created equal. My hubby ‘affectionately’ calls it my mumu.

You won’t see pics of the mumu here; but it meant the next sweater I tried to tackle better be more fitted. This ‘vintage’ sweater was just the ticket. Don’t look too close at this pic either, it’s from positioning and pinning the darts in the shoulders. While I like the overall style of this sweater, the shoulders still turned out kind of pointy.

This was my first pattern knitted from a chart. My mom’s an excellent seamstress, and it reminded me of the pattern pieces I’d see her cut out and assemble. It felt empowering knowing I could take any traditional pattern and possibly construct and assemble the pieces from a simple ball of yarn and some needles.
Pattern: Bella Paquita
Yarn: 1 skein Downtown Abbey yarn collection in Matthew, and 3 skeins Berroco Vintage in Black Currant
I originally bought the Downtown Abbey yarn online at Amazon to make a hat for my husband. The color turned out to not be the tone I wanted to use for him, so I put it back into my stash until I found the Vintage yarn and sweater pattern that complimented it very well.

On the Needles

More socks! Well, actually, Stockings! The Flicker Socks above were a ‘test’ project to get familiar with the basics of sock making. That was a top down pattern. Now I’ve started these toe up stockings.

I should have enough yarn to knit it all in blue (Malabrigo Sock in Impressionist Sky), but also got enough to do the shorts that match in a complimentary purple (Dewberry) should I choose. I really wanted to do contrasting purple cables on blue shorts, but haven’t come up with a good way to do the color-work. Colorwork’s a whole ‘nother new area for me to explore in a different project(s) ’cause I’ve got a new book for inspiration, Alterknit; and hubby picked out a yarn that’s screaming BEEs!

Seashore Eclipse Shawl

I think I started knitting this in August 2017. Right after I finished the Wood Nymph Poncho. I had bought the Queensland Uluru yarn in Aurora Borealis and Sargasso thinking I would make the Sling Shawl I’d seen featured at my local store. Then I started pattern hunting and thought I might gift it as a nursing cover-up to the mama I’d given the trout newborn set. At the rate it’s being worked, I’ll be lucky if that now-7-month-old isn’t in school by the time I finish it! The circular portion went pretty quick. I threw some random beads & turquoise stones in there.

I was knitting it through the Solar Eclipse and the devastating hurricanes that tore through Houston & Puerto Rico, thus the name.  I found the Diamond of the Island border design as I was finishing up the circular portion, which some had remarked reminded them of a sea shell. In hindsight, I wish I’d maybe tried a smaller needle size just for the border to perhaps make it a little less airy. While I didn’t understand knitted on/off borders, I started by trying to knit it separately, thinking I would attach it later. Change in course again, and decided to knit it on as I bound the project off, as it was intended.

In November, I got really frustrated trying to knit through this pattern. Lace knitting takes a totally different level of concentration than some other things; and distractions in my head made this a very difficult project to work on. I set it down for a few months and have recently picked it back up. It’s still slow going, but I seem to be in a better groove where I understand the pattern better. I can see my mistakes in my progression, hey that’s what makes it even more beautiful—and I’m most likely to be the only one who notices.

I also got lucky and found the last ball of the matching yarn at my local store on a return visit, so no need to worry about running out before I’m done. Another thing I would have considered changing is doing the border in a solid color to highlight the lacework more. Now that I have spent so much time with it, I believe it will take at least a few turns through my wardrobe before I consider passing it along.

Feathers & Leaf Crochet

When it comes to yarn-craft, so far, I stay focused and complete most projects I set myself to. These are two that are sitting in the TBD pile… The feathers are based off of this blanket and crocheted using Nako Arya Ebruli in Electric Blue. I thought I was going to attach them together in a scarf shape. I can look at them now and consider using them as an applique or embellishment for something else. A sweater yoke, perhaps? With how my skills have developed since I started them, I kind of want these to be knitted at a looser gauge, now too.

This leaf is also a pattern from the book Crochet Inspiration and using embroidery thread. It should have a border row around it that also forms the stem. Again, grandiose ideas to make several leaves for some sort of fabric, attaching them together while bordering.

Too many other projects have taken priority, so those sit for now.

My favorite thing about my adventure through these crafts is learning and trying something new, experimenting. Endless possibilities lay ahead, bundled in a little ball.