A slow morning on the farm — hands in heritage fleece, a table set for lunch, and something beautiful to bring home to your garden.
There is something deeply satisfying about working with your hands and knowing exactly where the materials came from. At Nest & Wool, you'll spend a morning at Bellewether Farm preparing raw fleece from our Kerry Hill flock — a rare and ancient breed known for its dense, lanolin-rich wool — and winding it into refillable nesting starters for the birds returning to your garden this spring.
Kerry Hill sheep have been bred in the Welsh borderlands for centuries. Their fleece is long-staple, soft, and naturally water-resistant — qualities that make it exceptional for wild birds building nests. Hummingbirds, wrens, chickadees, and titmice will seek it out. You'll leave with three or four finished nesting hearts, ready to hang, plus a packet of extra raw fleece for refilling through the season.
This isn't a craft class. It's a morning that moves at the pace of the farm — unhurried, grounded, and quietly beautiful.
The workshop closes with a seasonal farmhouse lunch at a shared table. Conversations tend to linger. Guests often arrive as strangers and leave having made plans to return.
A slow morning on the farm — hands in heritage fleece, a table set for lunch, and something beautiful to bring home to your garden.
There is something deeply satisfying about working with your hands and knowing exactly where the materials came from. At Nest & Wool, you'll spend a morning at Bellewether Farm preparing raw fleece from our Kerry Hill flock — a rare and ancient breed known for its dense, lanolin-rich wool — and winding it into refillable nesting starters for the birds returning to your garden this spring.
Kerry Hill sheep have been bred in the Welsh borderlands for centuries. Their fleece is long-staple, soft, and naturally water-resistant — qualities that make it exceptional for wild birds building nests. Hummingbirds, wrens, chickadees, and titmice will seek it out. You'll leave with three or four finished nesting hearts, ready to hang, plus a packet of extra raw fleece for refilling through the season.
This isn't a craft class. It's a morning that moves at the pace of the farm — unhurried, grounded, and quietly beautiful.
The workshop closes with a seasonal farmhouse lunch at a shared table. Conversations tend to linger. Guests often arrive as strangers and leave having made plans to return.