Current:Home > ScamsIn a Sheep to Shawl competition, you have 5 people, 1 sheep, and 3 hours — good luck! -GrowthProspect
In a Sheep to Shawl competition, you have 5 people, 1 sheep, and 3 hours — good luck!
View
Date:2025-04-15 05:10:41
At the Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival, the "Sheep to Shawl" challenge is simultaneously cut-throat competitive and warm and fuzzy.
Each team is made up of one sheep and five people: one shearer, three spinners, and a weaver. The team has three hours to shear the sheep, card the wool, spin the wool into yarn, and then weave that yarn into an award-winning shawl.
Preparation is the secret to success, says Margie Wright, team captain of The Fidget Spinners. She spent months looking for the perfect sheep for her team. "The hard part is finding a sheep that's not too greasy," she explains.
Because the competitors are spinning wool that hasn't been processed, it still has lanolin in it. This makes the wool greasier and more difficult to spin, so the ideal is finding a sheep with less lanolin to begin with. The teams also spent hours getting their looms ready for weaving. Wright explains this can take as long as seven hours to do.
One group of people hoping to weave their way to glory this year was much younger than the others. Four high schoolers from a local Quaker school participated as part of their fiber arts class.
"Learning to weave was the most difficult thing I'd tried in my life," says 18-year-old Caitlyn Holland. She and her teammates started learning just six months ago, and their teacher, Heidi Brown, says they're already impressive spinners and weavers.
Brown adds that this is the second junior team that has ever competed in the Sheep & Wool Festival. The first team was in the 1970s. She is already planning to continue the program for her students next year.
It takes a lot more than just speedy spinning to win the competition though. Former competitor Jennifer Lackey says the contestants are also judged on the quality of their shawl, teamwork and less fiber-arts related aspects such as the team's theme and costumes.
This year's teams were all enthusiastically prepared to earn points for themes and shawl quality alike. The high school students, competing as The Quaker Bakers, wore aprons and made rainbow cupcakes to match their rainbow-themed shawl. The Fidget Spinners chose "I Love Ewe" as their theme and covered their shawl in hearts. The third team, which arguably should have won an award just for their name — "Mutton but Trouble" — wore crocheted acorn hats and made a fall-colored shawl to represent their theme of squirrels.
Of the three teams competing for three awards, The Quaker Bakers placed third, Mutton But Trouble came in second, and The Fidget Spinners took home the first prize.
Overall, it's fair to say, a competition less wild than wooly.
See what it looks like for yourself — here's a video from the 2017 "Sheep to Shawl" competition at the Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival:
veryGood! (161)
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Blizzard knocks out power and closes highways and ski resorts in Oregon and Washington
- Angela Bassett, Mel Brooks earn honorary Oscars from film Academy at Governors Awards
- Horoscopes Today, January 9, 2024
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Selena Gomez and Timothée Chalamet deny rumors of their Golden Globes feud
- Spotify streams of Michigan fight song 'The Victors' spike with Wolverines' national championship
- Southern Charm Reunion: See Olivia and Taylor's Vicious Showdown in Explosive Preview
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Killing of Hezbollah commander in Lebanon fuels fear Israel-Hamas war could expand outside Gaza
Ranking
- 'Most Whopper
- Olympic skater under investigation for alleged sexual assault missing Canadian nationals
- Family of Arizona professor killed on campus settles $9 million claim against university
- Blizzard knocks out power and closes highways and ski resorts in Oregon and Washington
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- In Falcons' coaching search, it's time to break the model. A major move is needed.
- American Fiction is a rich story — but is it a successful satire?
- “We are on air!” Masked gunmen storm TV studio in Ecuador as gang attacks in the country escalate
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Spotify streams of Michigan fight song 'The Victors' spike with Wolverines' national championship
Yemen’s Houthi rebels launch drone and missile attack on Red Sea shipping, though no damage reported
RHOSLC Reunion: Heather Gay Reveals Shocking Monica Garcia Recording Amid Trolling Scandal
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Boy George reveals he's on Mounjaro for weight loss in new memoir: 'Isn't everyone?'
In Falcons' coaching search, it's time to break the model. A major move is needed.
Horoscopes Today, January 9, 2024