Posted in Friesland Farm

Rain, Dads funeral & getting on with it.

Monday again! 27th April 2020, not a year we will forget in a hurry, a worldwide pandemic that has had massive impact on the way we live. There have been negatives but I’m hoping there will be some real positives that will change the way we do things both for the benefit of the environment and for our metal wellbeing. Time will tell but one thing is for sure we are living through one of the biggest historical events that will be written and learnt about for centuries to come.

Meanwhile I have been busy this morning doing a bit in the greenhouse, there are always plants to water and move round so they get a fair share of the sun, I potted on the peppers, they will continue to grow in the greenhouse as they did so well in there last year. I did a bit of hoeing to keep the weeds down on beds that are waiting for plants to go in and mulled over where things will get planted, I think I have a good idea of where everything will be going now. The sweet corn will be planted and underneath them will go pumpkin and butternut squash, they grow entirely differently, the sweet corn straight up and the squash will sprawl so double up the use of space. The same applies to melon and cucumber in the poly tunnel, the cucumbers are happy trailing along the ground, the melons like to climb so they will be planted together, the trailing plants will shut out the light and prevent weeds, another bonus. John has done a sterling job of clearing and cleaning out the back area which had yet again become a dumping ground, at least we have a space to dump everything I suppose but a lot of it is again stuff that we have collected and never used so it’s gone in the skip.

I feel like I’m just marking time, anyone else? I am trying to read articles I wouldn’t normally get the time to do and I really need to get back into listening to some podcasts, I think that would be a good idea. We are forecast a few days of rain so maybe that will be the time to chill a little.

Tuesday: Today is Dads funeral but before that we have the usual jobs to do and today because it is raining and likely to rain all day I am getting the horses in. Two reasons, one it’s not nice standing all day in the pouring rain and two the rain will make the grass ‘flush’ this is not good for them as the sugar content in the grass will go up and this could cause laminitis. If the horses were in work this would not be such a problem but because they are not using up that energy it would cause issues. I had a few other jobs to keep me busy, paying the end of month suppliers bills, John went to the chemist to pick up my prescription and then it was time for the off.

The funeral was a simple affair and I did reflect that Dad would have loved it, a few songs that were right up his street and a short eulogy and prayers, then we had a whisky toast at the grave side and said our goodbyes, we shared a few memories in the churchyard after the event and then it was time to come home. What is sad is that we could not have that all important wake after, a time to chat and remember with family and friends, many of whom lined the route but when the time is right we will have that get together as I suspect will may families around the country.

It has been raining all morning and when we got back we lit the fire and took the rest of the day off, well until feeding time later that is.

John did the feeding and egg collecting and I sorted them out ready to box up. The eggs sales are steady now, not manic like before thank goodness.

I had a lovely FaceTime session with all my brothers and sisters but mainly spent time just relaxing until it was time to go and and top the horses up with hay while John put all the birds to bed. Then I did something I never do and that is come back in and get into my PJs, normally I wouldn’t do this as you never know what will occur after dark but today I am making an exception and besides it will save time later when I can fall into bed and hopefully get a good nights sleep as last nights was a bit restless.

Wednesday: Raining again, good for the garden, that’s what I have to remind myself although it’s a tad chilly with it after the hot days we have had recently. This morning I turned Jack back out into the paddocks but at the moment Biscuit is still in and we will be making her a pen so that she does not gorge on grass once it starts growing. I then fed the rabbits/Guineas, turkey, light Sussex and quail and I was supposed to let the geese out but forgot and only realised after we returned from getting my bloods done, ooops schoolboy error. I did a bit more seed sowing in the greenhouse, some strips of peas, sweet corn and dwarf beans these will be for putting out for sale when they come through. I potted on some cherry tomato plants that Shelley had grown as well. Then it was time to go and have my blood test and on the way back pick up a few essential items from the shop. We probably won’t do much more than the usual today we have got into the habit of watching the lunchtime news and then the afternoon easy watching programmes 🤣🤣

This morning I noticed feathers under the hen coop and said to John that a hen must have been out over night and the fox had got it, when he went to clean them out later he discovered that actually the fox had chewed the legs off of a hen that was inside the coop. There are slats which let the poop fall through and onto the ground and normally the hens roost up on poles but this one obviously sat on the floor of the coop and that is what can happen. The mains electric was on but we need to watch out as this could be a problem fox.

I turned Biscuit out to be with Jack overnight and tomorrow Sam is coming to set up a strip for her to graze in.

Thursday: I had a bad night again last night and I just can’t figure it out at all, it starts off with me feeling the cold which turns to shivering and I can’t get warm all night, I get up in the night and take ibrufen and then I’m sweating. The doctor called with the results of the blood test and my platelets are still low, they have come up ever so slightly but nowhere near enough so I’m still off the methotrexate and still on the steroids bit a lower dose. I did say to her that it’s not like a normal flare up and that’s the difficulty of this disease it doesn’t really follow patterns, it’s different for everyone and even for the same person the flare ups can be different and random.

Sam was here bright and early and used the stakes and tape to set up an area that Biscuit will have to stay in for most of the summer now, she has a field shelter and some trees for shade and we can get in and out of the gateway without having to go through any other paddocks which is useful. If you have ever had a pony or horse you will know that they are on the whole not very respectful of fences 😂 but Biscuit is a real sweetheart and when Jack breaks out she will just stand there knowing she shouldn’t be following so I don’t envisage too many problems there.

It’s mid afternoon and it’s been peeing down all day, I have been inside cleaning the kitchen and doing a bit of baking and John has been in the stable block giving that a tidy up. I had some melon plants arrive which I had totally forgotten that I had ordered way back at the beginning of the year.

Friday: Mayday 😀 the beginning of a new month, a month of plenty to do and this morning I have been planting tomatoes and melons in the big tunnel, I did a bit of weeding in there and then a bit of watering, the strawberries that I put in last year are doing really well with plenty of fruit setting on them, I will look forward to eating those. With the rain comes plenty of weeds bit I can’t hoe until the ground is dry again and it’s supposed to be dry and warm again next week.

Meanwhile we caught the fox and had that dealt with and John has been edging the last bit of the lawn that needed doing (for about 5 years 😂) Then it hammered down, hopefully it will blow over and we will have a nice afternoon, fingers crossed🙄

Sunday: No idea what we did yesterday but it was probably similar to every day! Today has been pretty productive, we have cut a few areas of grass before it gets too long including the front paddock. We also spent a good couple of hours digging out patches of nettles that have sprung up in the front paddock, I don’t mind nettles but not when they begin to invade the middle areas, the edges they can stay as long as they don’t encroach too far. Nettles are probably one of the most beneficial plants you can find both for humans and wildlife, they support a huge range of insects and are supposedly good for many human ailments including chronic inflammation but as yet I have not tried them and of course you can make string and clothing from them though the process is long and hard going, but if we ever find ourselves in a situation (and never say never 🙄) nettles are the one thing you do want growing 😀

We have done plenty of other jobs inbetween, some hoeing/weeding, sorting out more plants lol, I have also weeded an area in the front that is looking scruffy and I have popped a few plants in to brighten it up a bit. It’s in the front compound area and the weeds tend to get a good hold so I have put a few thuggish plants in, if there is an area that is difficult then thuggery is the answer, the shasta Daisy is one such plant, things like periwinkle and lemon balm, borage, calendula, they will all grow no matter what you do to them and hopefully smoother out the weeds plus give a bit of colour against the drab fence. I always wanted this area full of lavender but the dogs we had when we first came trampled everything so I gave up on the idea, the dogs we have now are not so clumsy but still they do manage to tread on stuff and break it so lavender just won’t cut it.

John spent an hour or two metal detecting again and no we can’t retire on his findings, a few bits of twisted metal isn’t going to get us anywhere lol.

I found some duck breast in the freezer this morning so we have had those pan fried with crushed potato, purple sprouting picked fresh from the garden and a red wine gravy, tasty 😋

I am beginning to see and feel the steroids working albeit slowly, I do feel better than I did this time last week so hopefully it will be onwards and upwards, that is always the plan sometimes is jumps track 😜

John has gone back out after dinner to move the chicken fencing in the side paddock so that the hens are on fresh ground. We have another delivery of chickens tomorrow but we will be keeping some of these to add to our laying flock as the demand for eggs has not eased much, it will be good to be able to provide eggs for everyone that wants them.

Gosh, reading back it’s hard to believe that Dads funeral was at the beginning of the week it seems a lot longer ago, time feels like it’s dragging somewhat now but I guess we all have to hang in there and hopefully there will be light at the end of the tunnel. A customer said that her elderly Dad had died of the virus but actually that is the only person I know of, we don’t seem to have been hit too hard here or maybe once we get back out in the wider world we will hear of a few more 🤷‍♀️

I am sorry about the lack of photos, I keep saying that I know, must try harder Dawn, I can tell you that the fruit is all beginning to form, strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, apples, pears, cherries, there are tiny broad beans on those plants and plenty of foliage on the potatoes, the carrot tops are getting bigger so hopefully underneath is as well and the garlic I planted last Autumn is huge. The root veg seeds I sowed at the beginning of the week are already up (well some of them) so all in all the veg garden is coming along nicely. I did think about planting out the more tender stuff this week coming (sweet corn and squash) but we are due to have a temperature dip next weekend so I will leave it, there is nothing worse than nurturing plants for them to be ravaged by the cold or the wind so I must be patient a little while longer 😀

Have a great week, stay safe x x

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