Wednesday, March 15, 2017

My First Skein...

I finished plying my single yarn and wound it around the niddy-noddy I made out of a pvc pipe I scavenged around the house.  I bought some cap ends and t-connector at a local hardware to assemble the niddy-noddy and make it look nicer.



The two-ply yarn made about 50 loops around the niddy-noddy and the loop was about 30 inches when stretched.  I spun about 3000 inches or 250 feet of 2-ply yarn (or 500 feet of single-ply yarn).




It weighs about 37 grams. I took some yarn and knitted a small swatch.  The yarn thickness is irregular and has lots of lumps, but after knitting several rows, I got the hang of it. So, it is possible to spin a roll of medical cotton into a yarn and knit it into something.
















Next I boiled the yarn for few minutes in a soapy water and rinsed it afterwards. This is to permanently set the twist on the yarn.




































After hanging the yarn to dry, I have my first skein of yarn!



















What's next?  Well, I have found a source of natural cotton fiber.  I bought 2 kilos, which will probably last for a while.  I can not wait to spin them but i have to rework my spinning wheel, or probably even make a new one similar to our traditional wheel.



Thursday, January 19, 2017

My First Spinning Wheel...



















Still feverish with the spinning bug that bit me, I have been spending the couple of days building my first spinning wheel, complete with flyer and bobbin assembly.  I based my wheel on the dodec design which can be found plenty on the internet.  I decided not to build the dodec wheel out of wood but instead, use a bicycle wheel to save time.  Except for the wheel, the screws and the nuts and bolts, most are recycled materials.  It took me some time to get it working.  I had to re-make the flyer whorl several times because the drive band keeps on slipping and the flyer will not turn.  I found out that for whorls, you use V-groove to get more traction while for bobbins, you use U-groove and should be very smooth to allow for the scotch tension to slip.  It seems to work now.  I can make minute adjustments on the scotch tension to control the rate the bobbin pulls and winds the yarn.  But the spinning wheel still needs a lot of work and tweaking.  I have to redo the treadle.  With the light and simple spindle assembly, the treadle works fine, but with the flyer and bobbin, the treadle will not work at all.  I have to crank the wheel with my hand. So far, all the problems I have encountered, can also be found on a good commercially produced spinning wheel, so I guess mine is ok for now.

But, even if I managed to perfect my wheel, still there is one factor I have not addressed.  Fiber preparation, particularly cotton.  I am still using medical cotton to test my wheel and it is very difficult to draft.  In the west, spinners use a special tool called carders to prepare fibers, or they can buy fibers in different forms like sliver, rover, roll logs, punis... these are ready for spinning.  However, we do not have these in our country.  We do have spinning traditions here in our country.  I believe, if I am not mistaken, it was in Ilocos where the masts of the great galleons of the west were weaved.  But, tabacco industry later became more profitable, and we lost the cotton industry.  I still have not found any reference as to how we traditionally prepare our cotton for weaving.  I am pretty sure we did not use carders.  But our traditional hand cranked spinning wheels were very much like the ones used in other asian countries, like in Laos.  In Laos, they use a simple tool similar to a bow, and they use the string part to beat a pile of cotton inside a basket until it is all fluffy.  Then with a long thin stick, they rolled the fluffy cotton tightly into a punis form similar to India.  Carders, I can not make, but a bow with a string, and a basket, that I can make.  Our ancestors probably use the same technique.  There are still a few weavers in Ilocos which still use the old method, maybe I should take a visit.

Flyer and bobbin assembly...


 B

Spindle attachment...







Sample one ply yarn...


Whorl groove.. and scotch tension...





Monday, December 26, 2016

The idea of spinning my own yarn has been bugging me for days.  Most of the yarns I used for knitting were imported and some of them were quite expensive.  Man has been hand spinning yarn since the ancient days so I know it is not impossible, plus, there are lots of how-to videos on youtube, which also means hand spinning yarn is not an obsolete technology.

So yesterday, with my old mini-lathe and a piece of 2-by-2 I pulled out from the firewood pile, I turned myself a dealgan, a whor-less drop spindle used by the people of the north... or the west... I am not sure.  Animal fiber is a bit difficult to find in our country, so I settled for something readily available as substitute, a 400-gram bag of cotton roll.  It was a bit frustrating at first, but I managed to get the hang of it in a few minutes.  I finally settled for a park-draft technique, where I spin the dealgan a few times, hold it between my knees, and while maintaining the tension of the yarn, draft the cotton a few millimeters at a time as it is taken up by the twist created by the spinning of the spindle.  Drafting was quite difficult as the cotton fiber is very short.  So I have plenty of bumps in my yarn.  But I am sure with some more practice, I can have the smoothest yarn possible for a drop spindle and a cotton fiber.  Maybe carding the cotton might help also, but right now, I am not sure how I should get one.  Carding boards go for $30 and up at Amazon!

Anyways, I think I was able to spin a couple of yards last night.  Probably not something a yarn hoarder would want in his stash, but it is definitely a yarn.  The dealgan is quite an amazing tool.  It fascinated me that all you need is a weighted stick to make a yarn or thread out of a fiber... imagine what a Spinning Wheel can do!


Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Homemade soap!

Trying to learn a new craft... soap making!  This was planted in my brain years ago when I saw a segment on "Japan Screen Topic" about a community that recycles used cooking oil from around the neighborhood and turned it into detergent soaps.  Working on bees finally pushed me to do it.  I was thinking of just doing the "melt and pour" soap making process but I overcame the fear of working with lye and decided to go for the "cold process".  I ordered my raw materials, just caustic soda and coconut oil, invited my buddies to come over the weekend so we can have our usual RPG session and make some "beauty soaps."  Nope! we did not pour lye on our hands ala "Fight Club!"  And we also did not use and human fats!

Forty-eight hours later, and the soap still won't come out clean from the silicon mold.  The soap is still soft and soggy especially at the bottom.  But the top is smooth and hard.
















However, the moment the soap is exposed to air, it hardens.  Below, I gave the bottom part a little patting and smoothing so it will look a little bit OK.  I'll let the soap stay in the mold for a while.  I won't be able to do another batch until maybe next Sunday. Once I figure out the basics of soap making, I'll try to add my bee propolis extract!




















Sunday, May 17, 2015

Stingless bees have started storing food in the eduction hive...



Twenty nine days into the eduction process, the bees have started storing food in the eduction hive. The bees have also sealed a great portion of the new hive box.  So, far I have not seen a queen.  I believe she will come later when the new hive is completely furnished.  Apis cerana, during the process of swarming, will leave the old hive without any idea where they will find a new home. Stingless bees on the other hand will look first for a new site and prepare it before their new queen moves in.








I also monitor the traffic going in and out of the eduction tube.  There will come a time when the main hive will cut off the connection to the eduction hive.  This is probably when a new queen starts laying eggs in the eduction hive, or when the main hive feels threatened. In such cases I will remove the tape covering the hole so the bees from the main hive will be able to forage outside.






Eduction method in progress...






What happened to the honey store?!?

I checked one of the hive yesterday and noticed the wax combs seem quite dry... the capped honey cells were missing and the nectar cells also disappeared.  The dish feeder was also dry...  Could it be that the bees have used up the little stored honey they had? That the honey flow is really over and supply can not keep with the bees demand? Rainy season is almost here.  What will my bees eat?  I got worried that my bees will abscond if they will not find any forage so, I returned this morning... and fed them sugar-water... sad... The queen cups I saw last time were still empty probably because of shortage of food.  I do not think they will push through with the reproductive swarm though.  So, I have to accept it, I am not going to get any harvest this summer.  Well, as long as my colonies will get stronger, I guess it is OK.














The bees were quite agitated again.  While inspecting the second hive, a bee decided to stick her sting through my thin jacket and got me in the arm.  I closed the hive and retreated back to the house but the bees were relentless and pursued me.  I moved in and out of the house to lure the bees out. When I thought I drove all the bees out, I removed my veil, but to my surprise, one bee managed to stay put inside.  It went berserk the moment I removed my veil.  I tried to flail my veil around hoping to drive the bee away but I think it only made her more angry.  It made a kamikaze attack directly at my face, which I failed to dodge. It got me near my left eye.  It was very close.  After that, I decided not to take any more photos and just finish putting sugar water in each hive as fast as I can so I can go home immediately before my left eye swell shut.  So far, not much swelling is happening and I hope it stay that way.  But based on my previous stings, the swelling really starts after a few days.














Anyway, I think the bees will be OK for now.  I don't think they will abscond.  I hope the feed will encourage them to stay put, forget about swarming, and start building brood combs on the lower chamber.  However, I still can not say that there are no food in the area.  As I observed each hive activity this morning, lots of bees were hauling loads of pollen.  The traffic was a steady stream.  I will check again in a week to see if they have started storing honey again.

I also found a few dead bees inside one of the chicken feeder I placed outside.  Which means, the bees were able to find the feeder.  I really do not like putting feeder inside the hive as it attracts hordes of ants.

Row of young larvae (center) surrounded by capped brood cells...


























Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Giving Eduction Method Another Chance...


I just can not give eduction method a rest, so, I am at it again using one of the stingless bee colonies at CVSU.  I am not doing it step-by-step. I immediately connected an eduction hive to the main hive. I am hoping the stingless bees are as intelligent as the cerana bees in finding their way out and then back again, though I think it would be much of a challenge for them considering their size.  They have a long way to walk to reach the exit.














I was able to take a small piece of brood from the main hive and put it in the eduction hive. This is suppose to speed up the process.  Now I think I know why, or at least I know one reason.  If new bees are to emerge from the piece of brood I put, then, those bees will consider the eduction hive their real home and they will start working on it.  I don't think they will be going to the main hive.  There should be at least a hundred bees in that piece of brood.



It is actually Day 2 of the experiment, and I still have to see a clear indication that the bees are able to make their way back to the main hive.  The photo was taken this morning and there was very little activity going on.  Hopefully, this coming friday, I will be able to observe the bees the whole day so I can track the movement of some pollen carriers.

I put plastic sheets on top of the hives so now I can watch the bees without them flying out.  Here are some photos I took.

this is the eduction hive...













and these are photos of the main hive...












the brood...












pool of honey (upper right corner)












bees filling the honey pots (center)












a close-up of a stingless bee (Tetragonula biroi)... this guy is a little bit smaller than your regular house fly...