So, if you
want to know how many jumpers can be knitted
out of a sheep's fleece, where it is
possible to buy yarn, how to operate or buy
a spindle or loom, or have your fleeces
cleansed, carded and spun into spools of
yarn ready for weaving, then the Guild will
be able to answer all your queries with
ease.
The Guild’s
website will give you all the information
you need to find them and their diary of
meetings and events:
www.hantsguildwsd.hampshire.org.uk; or
contact Secretary, Sandra Combes by email:
secretaryhantswsd@yahoo.co.uk.
A recent
query put to your editor by a member of the
Guild was asking if any Hampshire mill still
processed fleeces. For a couple of years a
business was run from a farm work unit
called Meon Valley Mill; research showed
this to have closed in 2009. It seemed that
sending fleeces to the West Country for
processing has been the only answer since
then, but now a new fleece processing
venture has opened up, just over the border
in Dorset, on the outskirts of Wimborne.
Two Rivers
Mill
was set up by Phil Allen, a self employed
structural engineer and Pete Roissetter, a
telecoms engineer who
owns the Rosewyn
Suri alpaca herd in Devon and who
realised a need for a specialist
alpaca fleece processing plant which did not
need to exist on large minimum order
quantities.
They were
awarded funding from the Rural Development
Programme for England with the help of
Business Link. To read more about this
enterprise go to:
http://www.tworiversmill.com/.
Three
Hampshire breeders of alpaca who are no
doubt pleased to learn of this processing
unit in Dorset must be Oakhanger Alpaca at
Bordon ,
Well Manor
Farm near Hook, and Cole Henley Farm just
north of Whitchurch. See their websites to
learn about the disarming creatures and the
properties which make their fleece so
lovely to handle.:
http://www.oakhangeralpacas.co.uk/;
http://www.wellmanorfarm.co.uk/ ;
http://www.watershipalpacas.co.uk/
I’ve had fun finding out so much about
alpaca, the WSPGuild and the Two Rivers
Mill; I hope you do too. Sheila.