Photo by Megan Pacer/Peninsula Clarion A woman crochets a teal hat during a session of the Wildwood Correctional Complex's inmate crochet program Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2016 at the complex's pretrial building in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Megan Pacer/Peninsula Clarion A woman crochets a teal hat during a session of the Wildwood Correctional Complex's inmate crochet program Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2016 at the complex's pretrial building in Kenai, Alaska.

Crocheting together help, hope

In the fiber art of crocheting, yarn gets connected together by making loops with a hook — “crochet” means “small hook” in French. Loop enough strands together and you can create shawls, scarves, hats, bags and sweaters.

Crocheting doesn’t just connect fiber. On the Kenai Peninsula, crocheting also connects two programs serving women: Alaska Correctional Ministries in Kenai and South Peninsula Haven House in Homer.

Under the umbrella of the prison ministry, Ardath Mumma of Homer and Susan Smalley of Kenai have been visiting women once a week in the pretrial facility at Wildwood Correctional Complex and teaching them to crochet. The work those women do in turn gets donated to Haven House for sale at Homer Thrift, its thrift store, with proceeds benefitting Haven House’s Child Advocacy Centers.

“It’s amazing,” Mumma said. “I never thought I would want to go into prison and be around people who have broken the law. I love those ladies.”

Using donated yarn and plastic crochet hooks purchased through the Inmate Council, a fund for prisoners for things like craft items and sporting goods, the Wildwood women make crocheted items like hats for homeless people or kids with cancer.The Child Advocacy Centers in Homer and Kenai offer a safe, nonthreatening place for counselors, health professionals and police to talk with child victims of sexual or physical abuse and investigate the crimes. Haven House director Missi White said the money raised through sales of crochet items at Homer Thrift will support a simple need: snacks and food for children and their families when they visit the Child Advocacy Centers.

“There tend to be needs that arise that we can never forecast from case to case,” White said. “Those are the kind of things that money can help us supply.”

Smalley said the Wildwood women support that use of the proceeds from the sale of their work.

“That brought tears to the eyes of many woman,” Smalley said. “Many have been in that situation.”

Started in 2012, Homer Thrift also serves another need. Clients of Haven House who escape from domestic violence sometimes need job and life skills to become independent, self-sufficient women. Homer Thrift has a 19-week program that teaches women marketable job skills — and gives them a job.

“Homer Thrift is more than a thrift store,” White said.

Mumma helped make the connection between Homer Thrift and the Wildwood crocheters. Paula Dean, manager of Homer Thrift, said she noticed Mumma coming in and buying yarn. She asked Mumma what she did with it and Mumma told her about the Wildwood women.

“So I started setting some yarn aside and donating it to her,” Dean said.

That lead to another idea: selling the finished projects.

“We got to talking. I thought it would be cool if we could sell it,” Dean said.

Wildwood has been doing a crocheting project for men in the minimum security camp for about six years, said Wildwood Correctional Complex Superintendent Shannon McCloud.

“It went along like gangbusters. I said, ‘It’s really unfair the women don’t have anything,’” McCloud said.

The crocheting program for women celebrates its third year this month. Participants use plastic crochet hooks, considered less a security risk than metal hooks or knitting needles. The women’s program at Wildwood is only for defendants awaiting trial. A program like crocheting classes fits the needs of that group.

“It really keeps them busy. We don’t have a lot to offer them because they’re moved around,” McCloud said.

Women taking the crocheting classes also have to participate in other classes. The classes also are a privilege, Smalley said — something the women respect.

“Most of them are pretty motivated and interested in going to classes anyway,” Smalley said.

McCloud said crocheting helps keep prisoners calm and can be especially beneficial to people with drug addictions.

“They’re getting some clarity. It’s something they need to keep their mind off what they’re going through,” she said.

Crocheting also gives the prisoners a chance to feel normal, Smalley said.

“They can talk about crocheting. They can talk about making stuff for someone when they get out,” she said.

“If you changed their clothing and the locale, it would be just like Knitty Night at Knitty Stash,” Mumma said, referring to a weekly knitting session at a Homer fiber arts supply store.

“If you saw us sitting there, we would look like any group of women crocheting, laughing and crying and sharing,” Smalley said.

Because the women use donated yarn, that also forces them to be creative, Smalley said.

“If you go to Joann Fabrics, you get the yarn you want. If you’re at Wildwood, you get the yarn you have,” she said. “They put together things in amazing ways.”

Smalley has been crocheting about 12 years. She calls herself “the yarn facilitator.”

“I’m not a super crocheter. I’m not a super teacher, but I’m willing to beg for yarn and go in and teach the women,” Smalley said. “People in the community have been really generous with donating yarn. In three years we’ve probably donated enough yarn to go to the moon and back.”

In the central peninsula, yarn can be donated at Smalley’s church, Soldotna United Methodist Church. In Homer, Mumma said yarn donations can be dropped off at the Knitty Stash on Main Street. Because the yarn needs to be washed, donations should be acrylic and not wool, Mumma said.

“I feel like that’s something God has placed in my heart,” Mumma said of her work crocheting with the Wildwood women. “I want to do something for those women so when they get out they don’t fall into a black hole and when they get out they’re reoffending.”

“It’s a real gift for me,” Smalley said. “It can be a success where successes are few and far between. It’s a positive thing.”

White noted how the gift of the Wildwood women’s work circles back to help the women and children of Haven House.

“They feel a sense they’re contributing to a community,” she said. “Those types of actions are just huge. They create such a positive impact. That really speaks to the character of the people who are doing this.”

 

Michael Armstrong can be reached at michael.armstrong@homernews.com.

Photo by Megan Pacer/Peninsula Clarion Booties, scarves, hats and more cover a table during a meeting of the Wildwood Correctional Complex's crochet program Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2016 at the complex's pretrial building in Kenai, Alaska. The items made by inmates through the program are sent around the peninsula to be enjoyed.

Photo by Megan Pacer/Peninsula Clarion Booties, scarves, hats and more cover a table during a meeting of the Wildwood Correctional Complex’s crochet program Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2016 at the complex’s pretrial building in Kenai, Alaska. The items made by inmates through the program are sent around the peninsula to be enjoyed.

Photo by Megan Pacer/Peninsula Clarion A woman shows off a ring made out of crochet yarn by one of her fellow inmates during a session of the Wildwood Correctional Complex's crochet program Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2016 in the center's pretrial facility in Kenai, Alaska.

Photo by Megan Pacer/Peninsula Clarion A woman shows off a ring made out of crochet yarn by one of her fellow inmates during a session of the Wildwood Correctional Complex’s crochet program Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2016 in the center’s pretrial facility in Kenai, Alaska.

More in News

Sockeye salmon caught in a set gillnet are dragged up onto the beach at a test site for selective harvest setnet gear in Kenai, Alaska, on Tuesday, July 25, 2023. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Board of Fish proposals center on king salmon, east side setnet fishery

Many proposals describe changes to the Kenai River Late-Run King Salmon Management Plan

Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion
Senior Prom King and Queen Dennis Borbon and Lorraine Ashcraft are crowned at the 2023 High Roller Senior Prom at Aspen Creek Senior Living in Kenai, Alaska, on Friday, Sept. 22, 2023.
Senior prom crowns king and queen

In brainstorming options, the concept of putting on a prom turned some heads

A photo distributed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation shows a man who allegedly robbed the Global Credit Union branch located in Anchorage, Sept. 19, 2023. Tyler Ching, 34, was arrested last week on charges related to robberies at the credit union and an Anchorage bank. (Photo courtesy Federal Bureau of Investigation)
Alleged bank robber arrested in Cooper Landing

An Anchorage resident was arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in… Continue reading

A seal rescued earlier this summer by the Alaska SeaLife Center awaits release on the North Kenai Beach in Kenai, Alaska, on Saturday, Sept. 23, 2023. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
2nd harbor seal release draws large crowds

The seals were Pierogi, Pringle and Belle de Fontenay

Attendees search the waters of the Kenai River for sightings of Cook Inlet belugas during Belugas Count! at the Kenai Bluff Overlook in Kenai, Alaska on Saturday, Sept. 23, 2023. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Belugas Count! celebrated in Kenai

At a viewing station on Kenai’s bluff overlook, dozens gathered and peered out over the Kenai River during a morning session

Kenai Peninsula Borough School District Finance Director Elizabeth Hayes, left, gives a presentation on the school district’s FY23 budget at Soldotna High School on Thursday, Oct. 8, 2021, in Soldotna, Alaska. Hayes during the KPBSD Board of Education’s Sept. 11, 2023, meetings, debuted first of an informational “Budget 101 Series.” (Ashlyn O’Hara/Peninsula Clarion)
School district warns of looming $13 million deficit in first ‘Budget 101’ presentation

The first installment explored Alaska’s foundation formula

Clockwise from bottom left: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Alaska Division Commander Col. Jeff Palazzini, Gov. Mike Dunleavy, Kenai Mayor Brian Gabriel, Kenai City Manager Terry Eubank and Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works Michael Connor participate in a signing ceremony for a project partnership agreement for the Kenai Bluff Stabilization Project at the Kenai Senior Center on Monday, Sept. 25, 2023, in Kenai, Alaska. (Jeff Helminiak/Peninsula Clarion)
Bluff stabilization agreement signed

The agreement allows the project to go out to bid and construction to begin

Lyndsey Bertoldo, Penny Vadla and Jason Tauriainen participate in a Kenai Peninsula Borough School District Board of Education candidate forum at the Soldotna Public Library in Soldotna, Alaska, on Monday, Sept. 25, 2023. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
School board candidates tackle budget deficits, home-schooling, school maintenance

The discussion was the first of two forums featuring KPBSD school board candidates

Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion
Brad Snowden and Julie Crites participate in a Seward City Council candidate forum at the Seward Community Library in Seward on Thursday.
Seward council candidates discuss issues at election forum

Participating in Thursday’s forum were Julie Crites and Brad Snowden

Most Read