Posted in Friesland Farm

Grazing tables, runner bean chutney & and soup mix.

Sunday night again: As I usually start the blog on a Monday morning I sometimes miss out something relevant or interesting, tonight while John was watching the F1 highlights I was reading a book I ordered last week.

Pretty interesting stuff and quite a lot of plants I had no idea you could eat, some of them are obvious and well known but a lot of them are long forgotten for instance we all know what Quinoa is these days, but the victorians were eating it long before we ‘discovered’ it and then it fell out of favour for many, many years. I have got quinoa seed that I was going to grow this year but when I got ill I couldn’t sow it, I will defiantly give it a go next year, along with some other grains, amaranth, millet, and wheat.

The sky, for a very brief period tonight (about 3 minutes) was amazing, it looked like someone had lit up the whole place with orange floodlights, I have seen some amazing sunsets in the years we have been here but that is a first, it was quite eerie, it was quickly followed by rain and dark foreboding skies.

Monday 30th July: It’s my birthday 😀 and as is custom I will be providing the food for any visitors today, I have decided to lay on a grazing table, look them up, they are amazing, I’m not saying mine is going to look anything like the artistic offerings on Pinterest but I will give it my best shot. My present is not arriving until mid August, I know what it (they) are and they will be increasing the menagerie by 2 but I will leave you guessing until then 😜

First thing I turned the water on in the poly tunnel then indulged myself with a coffee and a catch up with The Handmaids Tale, difficult to watch at times but a fascinating series.

We sold out of eggs yesterday and nearly every day before that and by the time John went to work the hens hadn’t laid so after a quick shower and another coffee 😝 I went to collect so that we will have some for sale today!

Top up Jacks water in the field, give the burning bin a kick so that it keeps smouldering away, lay out some cardboard on the garden, we have another heatwave ahead apparently, hard boil some quail eggs ready for later, FaceTime with Shelley! Josh and Flo, then with Sam and Mia, sit down with coffee 😜 I actually feel rather to tired today so I’m not going over do it although there are many jobs to get done, it’s my day, they can wait 🤪

Had a wonderful evening with some amazing presents, my family know me very well, I did the grazing platters for food and I was really pleased with how they turned out

Tuesday: Family funeral today and so it was just get the necessary jobs done first thing, I then watched a short tutorial on forest gardening, then out for a large part of the day, come back to get the necessary jobs done then out for dinner in the evening with Dad and Sue who came up for the funeral. Very tired by the end of the day!

Wednesday: Lammas 😀 Up fairly early not for any other reason than the dogs barking to go out, they don’t normally but they were in for a good few hours yesterday and so it was only fair to let them out, mind you they were barking at 3.30am however I ignored that and they then waited until 5.

John did the feeding as normal (it’s fallen into normal anyway) and I did some watering in the tunnels, fed the rabbits some forage and hay, took the sheets off the bed to wash, still feel pretty tired this morning.

I potted on the honey berries, red currants and cranberry, the cranberry I actually potted into an old recycle bin, which I lined and filled with ericaceous compost, it likes to stay wet apparently so I need to remember to keep it watered. Sue and Dad called in for coffee before departing for Wales and after that I did a bit of housework and had a little rest.

By 2.30 we had sold out of eggs and when I was ill it had to stay like that until John came home but as I am on the mend I went round and collected them up, feeding the birds thief scratch corn in the process, a bit early in the day but I would never get anywhere near the hut without tripping over them or standing on them if I didn’t do it😝 While I am there I turn out the persistent broodies, we are down to about 4 now as apposed to 11 at one point!

Did a bit of watering in the evening just to keep on top of the bit of good the rain did.

Thursday: Had a bit of a lie in this morning, the dogs barked at 5 so I let them out but went back to bed till 6.30 and I feel better for it, I feel like I have some energy to get on. I turned the sprinkler on at the bottom of the veg garden and the pressure was down so I went round the farm and checked that all the outside taps were off, they were so it wasn’t that, I went back and took the sprinkler head off one hose and attached it to another, nothing wrong with the pressure there so I went back to the other hose and found a piece of wood chip lodged inside, problem solved 😀 Then onto foraging for the rabbits, this morning they had a selection of weeds and herbs, I have also got into the habit of giving some to the light Sussex chicks who love picking over it. There seems a huge difference between the hybrids and the pure breeds as far as forage goes, the hybrids would certainly eat chickweed and brassicas but they wouldn’t pick over the plantain or the herbs as I have tried it before so I am really pleased that the pure breeds are going to be able to forage, and therefore sustain themselves. much more widely than the hybrids.

I dug up a few bits that I want to bring on for the hedge lines, lemon balm being one plant as well as a couple of dog roses that have self set, there are hazel trees and elderflower that sprout up all over the place which I will also be using, the ground is still too hard yet though.

I am still looking for something to create another small pond with and trying to decide where to put it, it will have to be covered with wire in the winter or the ducks will just demolish it when they are free ranging. I intend to let the Welsh Harlequins roam over the vegetable garden at the end of Autumn, they will help to control the slug/snail population and the light Sussex will also have free range to control any pests both above and below the ground, all the while they will be fertilising the area, win, win.

I went for a gentle wander around the farm, I was in the hunt for butterflies because we haven’t seen very many this year, plenty of cabbage whites but not many others. I did encounter a few common blues, my dream one day would be to spot large blues 😀 I have seen a few over the last couple of weeks, a speckled wood butterfly, red admiral, tortoiseshell peacock but not very many, I’m guessing the weather is making it difficult for them. I need to print off a little chart I can carry so that if I see any I don’t recognise I can look it up there and then, mind you it’s quite difficult to get a good look when they are fluttering about.

I did find a good amount of blackberries that I will be able to pick when they are ready , we haven’t had many for a few years as John cleared them all out of the hedgerows when he was tidying up 😝 plus the horses used to eat them before I could get to them and as there is just Jack now hopefully he won’t get round to scoffing the lot!

I thought I ought to stop chasing butterflies and do a bit of housework 🤪 besides it was getting a bit hot out there for me!

I picked up the post and in there was an invitation for a health screening which always gets me thinking. The questions are pretty generic especially on exercise, I don’t go to the gym or go for long/brisk walks, I don’t swim (anymore) BUT I spend most of my time (when possible) outside in fairly clean air, put it this way, I can smell the fumes when I go into town, and most of that time is spent on the move so that can be about 6/8 hrs a day, some of that time is spent doing hard physical work. Scraping dried chicken poo off the floor is pretty physical even though it doesn’t sound it, I hump 20kg feed sacks up and down, straw bales, barrowfuls of horse muck and occasionally there is some hard digging to be done, at times I have shovelled 14 tons of shingle, mixed up tons of concrete and barrowed it to where it’s needed, carried heavy blocks/pieces of wood and pushed heavy chicken houses/horse boxes/trailers, who needs a gym membership? Then there is the food question, do you eat healthily? Well this one always gets me, depends on what you consider to be healthy, I do not consider fresh vegetables/salad/fruit to be healthy unless it hasn’t been sprayed with either pesticide/insecticide/herbicide ( and lettuce the most heavily sprayed crop there is) or treated with artificial fertiliser and growth hormones. I don’t consider animals that have been routinely pumped full of medication of any sort to be healthy either, I don’t really consider farmed fish to be the best option and I am beginning to wonder because of the state of our oceans if fish is actually a good option or not (and I rarely eat prawns because of their preferred abode shall we say 😩) I cook from scratch so I know what is in the dish I am eating and most of it is home grown, not every ingredient, that’s impossible, but those that are not, are on the whole responsibly sourced. Yes we eat pies, puddings and cakes but they are not shop bought (except if I am catering for lots of people a couple of times a year) have you looked at the ingredient list on a shop bought cake ?? 😩 there is barely a recognisable ingredient in them. I drink decaf coffee (haven’t quite made the leap to tea yet) I drink less alcohol than a nun who has taken her vows, mostly because alcohol does not mix very well with the meds I have to take, if I do, I have have two G & Ts (I prefer an artisan gin, should you ever need to know that 🤣) max so my unit measurement is a grand total of around 2 a month pushing the boat out if it gets to 4! Sometimes it can be 0 for months on end ( That does not include holidays away when it could be considered as binge drinking in context 🤪) So I think I do eat healthily, and sometimes heartily 😋 but always mindfully, PLUS I take very good care of my gut bacteria, a subject that the medical profession, in this country, on the whole has not woken up to yet. Now, back to the subject, where do you think I will find the tick box for that lot 🤔

The grains I ordered arrived today, amaranth, wheat and millet, oooo now I’ve been looking them up and milling at home is a possibility I am full of enthusiasm for growing it 😀 originally I bought them to grow for the chickens but we may as well benefit too.

The runner beans are coming in thick and fast, I think chutney is on the cards, the butternut squash are growing well I’m really pleased with them, last year they were very small and not very many of them either. The melons in the poly tunnel are also doing much better than any other year, and the tomatoes are looking like a good crop too. I grew three types of tomato, money maker, your average size tomato, beefsteak, giant ones, though they haven’t got that big yet and then plum tomato which will be for making sauces or cooking with, great because the basil is also doing exceptionally well, yum.

My dual pear tree, although it’s growing very well, has got scab, just on the one variety, the other must be more resistant, so I spent the evening reading up about it, how to control it and also how I need to prune it, there are lots of pears on it, it’s a shame that about 50% are no good 😏

Friday: I set to pruning the pear tree first thing, I need to make sure every leaf and fruit is picked up in autumn and burnt to try to prevent it happening again next year.

Going round the garden I discovered that something, either chicken or blackbird, has been pecking away at my spaghetti squash 😏 they are growing under the asparagus which has now gone to fern, so I had to cut the fern down low enough to be able to put environmesh over the whole lots to stop any more losses, if it’s not one thing it’s another, I thought they were well hidden away under there. Mum came over early and got started with the hoeing, it always looks so much nicer when it’s done but I hardly get time to do it so I’m very grateful 😀

We have had Samantha’s dog Alfie all week while she was away on holiday and he can be a real pain in the butt, he chases chickens (doesn’t hurt them it’s just a game) he chases the cats, same again, he will torment Jack in the field by trying to round him up, he jumps the gate when egg customers come and has even jumped into their cars when they open the door this week, he tears around from the back when he hears the back door open and barges through the gate nearly knocking you flying if you haven’t remembered he is there, he constantly carries the longest stick he can find in the hopes that you will throw it for him and you have to have your wits about you when he has that in his mouth, but he does have one use that the other dogs don’t have and that is that he barks at anything unusual. So when he started barking at lunchtime and it wasn’t in the direction of the front gate I went out to investigate. I found him down the strip between the duck pen and the veg garden barking away, I couldn’t see anything so I stood for a couple of minutes, then I heard someone whistling from the direction in the next field from us, up popped a familiar face, guess who has lost his hawk again 😂

Later on in the day I did some watering and harvested some of the potatoes that were growing in pots because it’s really hard to keep them going, there wasn’t much on them but a few boilings which will do us. I dug up some lemon balm and mint with roots and potted them up, I will be using some of it to plant in the hedgelines for the hens to forage on and of course the insects love them. They have both flowered and gone over now so I harvested the mint in big bunches and hung them to dry in the greenhouse, some of it will be crushed up and used for adding to the horse feed in winter and the rest will be dried for the rabbits. I will probably do the same with the lemon balm and both of them will put on some new growth before the end of summer, some mint that I already cut for feeding fresh to the rabbits has grown back and I have cut that to make mint sauce. I also harvested sage, again I cut it back after flowering and this is all new growth, that will be dried for winter use, I will probably give it a hard cut back in a couple of weeks which will then be dried for the rabbits in winter. I will also dry some mint for culinary use, I’ve not done this before I don’t know why it’s just not something I have thought about using dry, first time for everything 😀

Saturday: Got straight on with making runner bean chutney this morning and also some mint sauce both are pretty easy to do, if you have never had runner bean chutney give it a try it’s well worth it, very tasty 😋 I picked a few more runners and some mangetout, but that was about all I did outside. We went out for an impromptu lunch then of course the afternoon nap 😜 and out again this evening for a surprise party. Not achieved very much today!

Sunday: John got on with the feeding and letting out while I started the watering, had a bit of a lie in until 6.30 this morning 😀 It has been so hot again that the ground dries up fast, luckily overnight there is still moisture but not enough to keep everything going on it’s own. I did some picking, runner beans 😝 courgettes, baby corn and broccoli, although the brassica cage has kept the butterflies out it hasn’t kept out the flea beetle which arrived in hordes when the field next door was harvested. They make thousands of little holes in the leaves but eventually they will die off and the plants will recover with new shoots. The second lot of broccoli I planted, you will remember, kept going to seed and I had to keep taking the tops off, well they never produced anything, except seeds 😀) so I will let them go to seed and hopefully some self set plants will grown next year. The general rule is not to grow brassicas in the same place twice because of club root but I’m willing to chance it and see what happens.

Once it started to get too hot out there I came inside to prep what I had picked, firstly blanch the broccoli for open freezing, I soaked in in cold water after for a good while so that any beetles float to the top of the water and can be taken out. I finally got round to making my ‘Souper mix’ this is basically any veg and herbs you want to put in and blitz in a processor, in the photo everything except the celery Is from the garden and will make an excellent vegetable stock for soups or casseroles/stews, I can sneak things in there that John wouldn’t normally eat 😝 The original recipe suggests adding an enormous amount of salt and putting it in jars for storage however I decided to freeze it and the only thing I could find that would be about the right portion size was cake tins, so I used cake cases and filled them to the top packing down tightly and open froze them, when they are done I will discard the cases and pop them all in one labelled bag for use as and when.

I wanted to get some passata made as well but I haven’t quite got enough ripe tomatoes yet, I grew the large plum variety this year especially for this reason and as the garlic and basil have done really well I’m hoping it will taste divine. 😋

We had tickets for countryfile live today but as the temps are set to go above 31c and there is never enough shade at these kinds of shows we gave the tickets to Charlie and Macca, she reported that it was very hot and they were melting so I’m glad we didn’t go.

There is a very good reason why, when I but plants in, that I do not plant them up straight away, and today I am really glad that I don’t because the peach tree I bought has sprouted horsetail or marestail in the base 😩 an invasive weed that is difficult to eradicate, at the moment it’s one piece that I will break off and burn until such time I can take the tree out of the pot and clean the roots thoroughly. I could inform the place I got it from but as it spreads by spores it could have come from anywhere but I have never had it before and it is not growing anywhere else, yet!

An evening of watering, with the temps as they are it really doesn’t take long befor everything is dry as a crisp again! Rain forecast for the end of the week and I hope we get a bit more than last time, it’s getting a real struggle to keep everything going with the days shortening as well. A bit of tidying up in the fruit cage, the rabbits and Guinea pigs love raspberry leaves and so they had a bucket full of cuttings, and I’m done for the day 😀

Have a good week 😁