Artist bio – Christine Cillian, photographer


We continue today with the introductions of the artists who will be at the barn bazaar on November 17th and 24th. I also have some alpaca posts in the works, to mix things up.

It is my pleasure to introduce our very talented neighbor, Christine Cillian. Christine and her husband Brad bought their 10 acre ranch, next door to Cliff House, after she was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) four years ago. Seeking a less stressful way to live life, she is developing her photography and freelance communication careers, so she no longer will have to commute to Denver.

Christine has just returned from the John Fielder Fall Photography class in Telluride. She will be exhibiting her scenic photographs at the barn bazaar.

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Artist bio – Colleen Jepkes, rock artist


Here, in no particular order, is the first of our artist bios. We are lucky to have our very talented friends joining us on November 17th and 24th for the barn bazaar. Colleen is actually a friend of Mom’s from high school!

Colleen likes to think outside the box, considering herself eclectic at heart. Walt Disney’s use of color is a source of inspiration for her, as she strives to capture a piece of that color magic in her own work.

Colleen’s interests include sewing, embroidery, Tole and oil painting, sketching, jewelry making, wire wrapping and most recently rock painting. She will have a variety of her rock art pieces on display.

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That beautiful, terrible white stuff


The ranch got it’s first snow last week! The animals coped in different ways. The alpacas, who are cat-like in their dislike for being wet, hung out in the barn, miffed. The horses enjoyed a good roll in the mud. And the cats disapproved. Which, come to think of it, is how they feel about… just about everything. 🙂

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The Cliff House Barn Bazaar!


I know it’s been awhile since you heard from me, but don’t worry, we’ve been busy! Mom has been knitting, and Aunt Geri and I have been spinning like crazy for our upcoming Holiday Barn Bazaar! So if you are in the Denver, Colorado area, save either November 17th or the 24th, and come on down to the ranch to meet the alpacas.

We’ll have fiber products for sale, including American-made alpaca socks, hand and mill spun yarn, hats, scarves and felt art, and we’ll also be representing a number of our artist friends. Over the next few weeks, it’ll be my pleasure to feature their work here on the blog.

So sorry for the radio silence! I’ve just been making tons and tons of beaded yarns, and I hate to bore you with yarns you’ve already seen. But hopefully I’ll have enough for the bazaar.

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Magical color changing alpacas


I’ve been spinning up a mess of that Peppermint sprinkles yarn. About halfway through the process, I finished Morocco’s fleece from last year and started on this year’s fiber. Unfortunately, despite coming from the same alpaca, skeins made from last year’s fiber are an entirely different color from this year’s fiber.

What the…? Yeah, that’s what I said. I’m guessing the amount of sun an alpaca gets, the amount of weather they are exposed to, their age, and even slight differences in processing at the mill all combined to give Mo’s fiber a different tint. I’m not totally surprised…just sort of miffed. I have a bunch more spinning to do to get matching skeins of yarn!

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Yarn – Peppermint Sprinkles


I made a new yarn! I guess I’d gotten fairly comfortable working with the same yarn “designs” over and over. Silver beads in grey, purple in black, and tons of lace weight black yarn are my staples. But this is a brand new, for-the-holidays combination.

I spun it from Morocco’s roving, which is a very white cream color, with red and gold beads on white silk embroidery thread. It came out fluffy, soft, and with just enough sparkle.

I don’t know how much of it to make, though. Sometimes I really love a yarn that never sells, and other yarns which I am more “eh” about sell like hotcakes. What do you think?

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Wait, that’s not an alpaca product


I sat down this weekend to design more Christmas stockings (check out the felting page for examples), but I just…couldn’t. It’s much easier to come up with a theme for a friend than one for anyone. Red and green? Or blues, silvers, and grays? Nature scenes or traditional trees and ornaments? Way too many choices. And all I could think of was like…fall scenes. Leaves, pumpkins, corn and such.

So after about an hour of that, with only one passable design to show for it, I gave up and went to get coffee with a friend. Since we were downtown anyway, we walked over to my favorite fabric store. After that, any chance of me working on alpaca stuff just flew out the window.

Yeah, I know. Curtains are not an alpaca product. Alpaca fiber curtains would be just…weird. Overkill on insulation, certainly.

While the fabric was in the dryer, I made the curtain “rod”. I braided together three strands of a turquoise yarn a friend gave me years ago when her arthritis became too bad for her to knit. I used a door knob to hold the yarn as I worked, like I used to when I was 12. The white door, my blue bedroom walls, the painstakingly restored door hardware and the turquoise yarn made for a pretty picture on a perfect day.

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The little tractor that could


Remember that post about the new, bigger manure spreader? Well, one of the fall chores around the ranch is to spread our compost over the fields. It used to be a very tedious, long three or four days. Now, we can get it done in about a day!

Dad unhooks the tractor and uses the shovel to fill the spreader.

We were initially worried that our little tractor couldn’t pull the fully loaded spreader, but Dad put ‘er in low gear and just (slowly) went for it.

He hooks it back up, and takes it out into the field.

As an ecologist, I have to say, we have some pretty nice native plants in our fields. We make sure our compost is well and truly cooked before we spread it, because the high temperatures inside a good pile (135° -160° F) will kill weed seeds.

There are all sorts of moving parts. The compost sits on two belts that feed it to the back, where it gets turned over and split up as it’s spread.

We fertilize our fields in the fall, so moisture from rain and snow through winter and spring will break it down further, and spread the nutrients into the soil.

Our compost is more like mulch at this stage, so the auger thing is kind of redundant. It would dribble right off the back without any help.

I used to study this kind of thing, so I’m tempted to discuss over fertilization of historically nutrient poor areas (the plains of Colorado aren’t exactly verdant). Let’s just say that a careful balance between nitrogen, which comes from the animal waste, and carbon, which comes from their bedding, is important. I haven’t run any chemistry on our compost, but as long as the NATIVE plants keep looking healthy, I’d say we’re in good shape.

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Yarn – Hot Chocolate


I have gotten a ton of spinning done at the recent craft shows! I started this yarn at Sheridan celebrates, and just finished it. Here are two pictures, one with flash and the other without.

The color is actually somewhere in between the two pictures; it’s hard to get a good shot before the sun comes up. This is fiber from Gustav, one of our shearer’s alpacas. Since we had several of Gustav’s fleeces, we experimented a bit. This fleece is blended with 10% soy silk, which gives it a slightly luminous quality. I also have a fleece (I think it’s Gustav’s) blended with 10% merino, which should make a fluffier finished yarn.

Anyhoo. Yay yarn!

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It’s the circle of life…


…and it moves us all…etc. Sorry, I’m a proud member of The Lion King generation.

Needless to say, living on a working ranch, one sees “the circle of life” up close and personal.

Squeaky, our own mini-panther, is quite a mouser. Mom always tells him what a “sweet-y kitty” he is when he brings in another kill (I know, it doesn’t make a ton of sense). We generally prefer it when he doesn’t consume what kills though…

…oh well. I promise, he’s not starving. We are firmly in the “feed every animal all the time” school of thought, not the “they’ll hunt if they’re hungry”.

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