##Day 5
Ornithomancy --20 rounds on sock A
Prompt:
Ornithomancy dates back to early Greek times, appearing on Archaic vases, as well as in Hesiod and Homer. Ornithomancy could be spontaneous, or it could be the result of a formal consultation the seer would face north, and birds on their right—the east, the direction of sunrise—were taken as favourable (the reverse being true of the Roman augur, who by contrast faced south). Although it was mainly the flights and songs of birds that were studied, any action could have been interpreted to either foretell the future or relate a message from the gods.
For today's stripe, we are switching to gansey. Choose a colour of a national or regional bird (or one that has special meaning to you) and knit this traditional Flying Geese gansey pattern.
NB: depending on if you are knitting toe up or cuff down, knit the first row. This will create a break between the colourwork and gansey.
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