Posted in Friesland Farm

Sunshine ☀️ a vaccine & finally some gardening.

Monday 22nd February 2021: Just like that in a blink of an eye it’s Monday again. Another drizzly, grey morning, still quite mild for the time of year though. I do wish the weather would turn a little drier though, and if the sun could make an appearance that would be great. It seems like I am always wishing for different weather and generally I am, my ideal would be a dry sunny day of around 18c with rain overnight just in case anyone is listening and can do that for me 😜

John is working again this week and he did the rounds before he left. I sorted out the eggs, the hens are laying like crazy and we have plenty of them to try and shift. I did a few routine household bits and also phoned the septic tank company to get ours emptied, it did not get done last year due to covid so I really need it done this year to prevent any problems.

After chatting with our youngest daughter, Charlotte, I might have more of a go at growing micro greens. She is having a go at doing them for herself and she asked me what kind of seeds she needed to do it, I have plenty of spare seeds so I gave her a selection to get her going. It started me thinking that this would be a fairly easy way to grow a crop of tasty nutritious food, I just need to see if I can find a bulk seed company, buying the small packets is fine if you are doing it for yourself but on a bigger scale I need bigger quantities of seed to make it worthwhile. I have got pea shoots and garlic chives on the go for myself as mini salad leaves but the choice is huge really and so I think I am missing a trick here.

I take back what I said about it being mild, I went out to the greenhouse to do a couple of bits and to check on plants and it is colder than yesterday I think. I did organise a punnet of micro salad greens which are now on the kitchen window sill along with some peas that are just sat in the punnet, no compost, I have wetted the both of them and we will see how they get on. The peas I did in the greenhouse (which were in compost) have already started to rot, it’s just too cold for them at the minute, if at first you don’t succeed try something else 😆 The broad beans are coming up though and funnily enough the peas in the root trainers are too just not the ones in a seed tray 🤷‍♀️ too much moisture and too cold I think.

John came home just after lunch, I never know if I am coming or going theses days, I thought he was out for the day so was just hoovering the floors ready to give them a wash but that scuppered my plans. The reason becomes obvious when he is eating and drops some of it on the floor, why bother 😜

Boris set out the journey we are to take to come out of this long lockdown, it’s not quick but by 21st June we should be totally restriction free providing all goes well. On the downside it means that Charlotte and Maccas wedding will not go ahead on May 7th and restrictions will still be in place 😞 We will see if they are able to move it to later in the the year.

Tuesday: Not a bad day, slight frost to begin with but it soon warmed up a bit, grey and overcast mostly and windy but no rain 😀 John did the animals then went off to do a job, I got on with a bit of weeding and then moving some pots to clear the area where the next bed is going out the front. John came back and we carried on clearing the area, there were bags of compost, empty pots, pots with plants in, bit of debris etc etc and a pile of slabs. We cleared everything but the slabs and then set about giving the hazel trees a good prune, we didn’t do them last year and they have got a bit big and unruly. Now they are all cut nice and neatly, the branches all shredded and put back under the trees to put goodness back into the ground and give the mini beasts some cover. That pretty much took us well into the afternoon, the some lunch, a sit down, light the Rayburn, do the afternoon rounds and that’s another day over.

It will be March next week and that’s when many more seeds can be sown, I need to start in earnest making sure the beds are ready. I still have some flowers growing in some of them, once I can work out exactly what they are I will start transplanting them. We start the final bed out in the front area tomorrow, a smaller bed in a triangle shape, I am thinking this will be roses and romantic flowers like bleeding hearts, creeping phlox and agapanthus but I need to plan it properly first.

Wednesday: Blowy, grey, overcast, but not raining and fairly mild. John did the animals then went off to do a job and also pick up some sleepers for this last bed in the front area. It will be nice to get that done and I may have to have a trip to the garden centre to find some nice things to put in there.

This morning I have been preoccupied with a chance discovery, the pieces of the jigsaw fell into place as it were. I can’t prove a thing but it all makes sense to me, I am talking about the theft of the honesty box and money before Christmas. This is what I think, we had a delivery two weeks or so previous to the theft, the delivery driver and his appearance and van rang alarm bells (your intuition is high when you live rurally on a farm, you recognise certain traits 🙄) When I went to the gate and realised it was a delivery I felt a little better, however I thought I recognised the driver from way, way back, I had said to John at the time, I reckon that was ….. but I couldn’t be sure. The person in question didn’t always lead a static life shall we say, except when incarcerated at her majesty’s pleasure. Two weeks later when we were out for about three hours we returned home to find the honesty box and contents ripped from the shed, there was also a delivery in the shed. At the time John said I reckon it was the delivery person but we had no cctv evidence and no way to prove anything. Then this morning a post on Facebook which made me look at the profile more closely and there is the delivery driver that came here! It was who I thought it was, as I say I can’t prove a thing but it’s all a bit coincidental in my eyes.

It’s mid afternoon and we have spent till now working out on the front area, I did a lot of weeding in the first bed and I have a couch grass problem there that I need to bring under control. John and I have moved slabs, positioned sleepers and started building the bed. Shelley came to get her food from the freezer now hers has been fixed and Sam came with the kids so they all played in the front paddock to run off some steam and get some fresh air. Indoors at 2 for lunch and to light the Rayburn, we’d to be on target this afternoon with jobs and dinner as I have my vaccination early evening 😀

The first bed is looking good, I mean it’s still a bit dead due to the time of year but I can see things beginning to bud and grow, the bulbs I planted have all come up, crocus, snowdrops and tête-à-tête, only a few this year but year on year they will multiply and it will look amazing. I need to wait and see how well the areas are filled with what I have already planted, the temptation is to cram a lot in but I really want space for plants/shrubs to look their very best. Each bed will have a different character and the first one is full of flowering shrubs and bulbs, fragrant, berries and plenty of nectar for the bees.

Thursday: Well it’s 2pm and so far I have had no side effects from my vaccine last night, hopefully it will stay that way. John did the animals this morning and then went to do a little job but was back by 10am. We got started out the front again, I added an extra job to Johns list of beds 😜 About two years ago or whenever it was he put up the new front fence, I made a temporary bed in front of the fence. By temporary I mean pots of flowers all stood behind a piece of wood 😂 This morning I asked nicely if we could perhaps make it into a permanent one, it didn’t actually take long, we had the materials, plants and top soil to do the job. Around an hour or so later it was ready for me to take the plants out of the pots and plant them in the bed, hopefully it will look lovely in a few weeks time. The beds will save me a lot of time watering, when things are in pots they dry out very quickly, with the beds a good soaking once a week should be adequate.

Oh and the weather was beautiful 🤩 sunny, mild, dry practically perfect.

It is so nice to have flowers I have waited a long time to have proper flower beds again and the reward today was watching the bees feeding on the crocus 🐝 and he cat trying to catch the bees in mid air 😂

We have moved down from alert level 5 to alert level 4 today, a good sign that things are going in the right direction and the pressure on the NHS has eased somewhat, it hasn’t gone but it’s good news.

Friday: Gorgeous morning, frosty start then lovely sunshine ☀️ I had planned to get out on the veg garden but I woke up with a rash this morning, arms and chest, not sure if this is the vaccine or being in the sun yesterday so I figured I better avoid it today. That leaves housework, oh joy 😜 Gave the bedroom a good clean, pull out the bed and dust everything within an inch of its life, then wash the floors in the living room and kitchen. I did think about doing more than that but the momentum left me 😆

Watching the birds at the seed feeder this morning I spotted one I haven’t seen before, a coal tit, it’s quick and I barely managed to get a pic of it but I am chuffed we have another new type of garden bird around 😀

John was back and forth between jobs today and I mainly pottered around not achieving very much, bit tired today and I have learned that when tired don’t do too much, I have the luxury of being able to do that I know but I still think it’s sound advice I give myself 😜

Continue reading “Sunshine ☀️ a vaccine & finally some gardening.”
Posted in Friesland Farm

Valentine’s 💘 goose eggs & seed sowing begins.

Monday 15th February 2021: I am feeling more optimistic this morning about the weeks ahead, I think the weather really does have an effect on my moods and outlook. Today it is much milder, yes we have had rain and yes that is a pain going straight from a frozen solid week to a soggy one but everything feels a little lighter today. John has a full week at work this week so I will mostly be here by myself for the best part of the daytime but he did do the animals before he went this morning which means I can get on and get some things done indoors. I started off by changing the bedsheets and some washing, everybody loves clean sheets day don’t they lol.

Valentine’s Day is the day traditionally that geese start to lay and lo and behold we had the first goose egg of the season yesterday 🥰 it is a short season and by mid May they will have stopped or they will be sitting one or the other. We never have much luck with them sitting and hatching naturally, they always end up kicking eggs out of the nest. This year I think I am going to house them in a stable and let them free range, this will be after the hens are allowed back out of course. The stable will have much more room, one of the problems is that there are usually three geese trying to nest in a small space which is problematic, hopefully more space will help that situation but we will see. I would be nice to have goslings wandering around the place. It is one of those weird things in life that mean most of the domestic geese around the country begin to lay on the same day, I can’t explain it, I doubt if anyone else can either but they are pretty accurate in their timing 🤷‍♀️

Yesterday evening I started doing a bit on my online beekeeping course, I have chosen to look firstly at modern beekeeping methods which is what most people practice. However the more I learn the less I like it, it is basically farming whereas I would prefer the bees to live a natural life and so I will also be looking at natural beekeeping methods. The difference is that the bees are allowed to live as naturally as possible and you only harvest honey if there is enough for the bees to live on during the winter, if here isn’t you don’t have honey. As it takes a lifetime for a bee to produce a tiny drop of honey I think this is only fair really, there are a few other things that I am not keen on, wing clipping and generally suppressing the hive so that it doesn’t swarm. You know me by now and I prefer all things to have as natural life as possible I mean nature knows best doesn’t it and I would rather keep bees for pollination and survival purposes rather than harvesting lots of honey although a smidge of it would be nice now and again. Bees are fascinating creatures, even if you are not thinking of keeping them I would urge you to read up about them and their life it is amazing stuff. I will keep you posted on the topic and let you know what I decided, I am hoping that my tree bees will have survived the winter, I haven’t seen any sign of them yet but I will keep an eye out for them. It will be a major win if they have, proving that they can manage rather than be managed.

I went out and did a bit outside, planted the silver birch, I will get a picture in the spring as it’s basically a dead stick at the minute 🙄 John came home because the materials for the job were wrong so he concreted in some of the posts for the fence and then got called out to take a radiator off. The sun came out and it was really warm, the temperatures are forecast to be around 15c next weekend lol talk about a swing. I had a walk round and made some good observations on what needs doing but I felt it was t quite the right time just yet. You get a feel for when is a good time to start things and when it’s too early, either that or I am being lazy 😜 no seriously though I found a couple of big pots of bulbs growing but the soil is still frozen beneath the surface layer so it will have to wait for a few days more I think. I would have got and weeded that front bed but with the rain straight after the frost I don’t think that’s a good idea, looks like I will have a lot to do next weekend instead. One thing I have realised is that I don’t like working when I am encumbered with a winter coat on, the less layers I have to wear the better I work, I think he winter coat is heavy and it makes me a bit sluggish so roll on some nicer weather when I only need thin layers. I checked the greenhouse out, everything needed a bit of water but on the whole most things have survived well even that last week of extreme cold. The orange and lemon tree look a little worse for wear, they need some water but I will wait for warmer temps before I do that, I don’t want to water them and then if it gets cold again the soil freezes, better for the roots to just be dry than frozen. I had a good look round to see where these pallet collars will go and I think some major reorganisation needs to happen but again I can’t do that while the ground is still a bit frozen. I am looking forward to getting going once conditions are right though, bring on the growing season 😀

I did go out and do a bit more in the greenhouse as it’s such a lovely day I didn’t want to waste it. I did a bit of tidying and brushing off, pulled off dead leaves that sort of thing. There has been a mouse in there so I have put some grain down to see if it’s still there or not, if it is I need to get it gone before I start seed sowing in earnest. I did try and pull some weeds in the garden but the ground is still frozen underneath, I should have listened to my inner self really. I decided to come in and light the Rayburn and get a loaf of bread on the go before having some lunch and a quick sit down.

As I had some bread on the go I decided to make some cheese as well, not a snap decision, I had bought some milk when I went shopping the other day specifically to have a go. If you have some milk that you need to use up it worth thinking about making cheese, not a complicated process and in fact ‘farmers cheese’ is a simple thing to do with ingredients you probably have in the cupboard. Gently heat the milk in a thick bottomed pan, when it begins to froth and bubble (but not boil) take it off the heat and add white vinegar, this splits the milk into curds and whey. All you do is drain the curds, I use muslin (you can buy the organic baby ones which work great) then add salt and any flavour you want, chives, thyme, minced garlic, the options are endless. Squeeze all the liquid out and then shape it on a plate and weight it down with another plate. Thats it, simple enough and a great skill to have up your sleeve. The whey can be used in bread making or other recipes and the cheese will keep for a week in the fridge or can be frozen for use in recipes later. I think a slice of fresh bread and some freshly made soft cheese will make a delicious supper. I actually added salt and pepper to mine, I have a thing for pepper at the minute, no idea why but I tend to listen to my body, if it wants pepper, it gets pepper 😜

Tuesday: At last a day when I can get outside and get busy, and that’s exactly what I did. John did the animals first thing and then started on some more of the drive way area. When I had done indoor stuff I came out and planted the seven cherry plum trees, this is easier than it sounds as they are small whips and so pushing a spade in the ground and making a slit is all that is required for these. Then I spent the morning planting things in the new raised bed, this included digging some stuff up from elsewhere (those that I could recognise at the minute) After that I started on the fruit cage and cut back all the autumn fruiting raspberry canes and some weeding in the fruit cage. After that I went on to the very back bed to sort that out, this is quite a big job, it has a dual pear tree, a cherry tree, an apple, a mulberry and then four gooseberry bushes and three blackcurrant. Over time the gooseberries and blackcurrants have got a bit out of hand so I started by cutting them right back, this will mean no fruit this year from them but that’s fine we have plenty in the freezer from last year still. One of the currant bushes has a horse chestnut tree sapling growing through it so that will need to be dug up and detangled before replanting the bush. There is also a golden hop that has also got a bit out of hand and is spreading everywhere, I wouldn’t mind if it grew along the fence but it keeps choking the fruit trees so I have been trying to dig it out but it’s quite hard work. I haven’t quite decided wether I should completely dig the gooseberries out or not yet, they make it difficult to pick the top fruit as some of the thorns are wicked. I am glad I have a plan now though, that bed is the one that gets all the sun from early morning until evening which means it is a bed I have trouble getting to in the summer months, it is also a bed that will need no attention once I have cleared and cleaned it up so a good place to start I think. It is also the very back bed so I can work methodically towards the front end which will help when I am deciding what job to tackle, otherwise I tend to wander aimlessly from job to job and that never looks like I have achieved much.

I have some really tasty yellow raspberries ‘Autumn Gold’ if you get the chance to try some then do they are sweeter than red ones, I am hoping to divide my plants this year so I have even more of them to harvest later in the year. At the moment they are in pots but I am thinking of making a bed just for these in the fruit cage.

A bonus today is that I don’t have to cook dinner, the bad part of the story is that Shelley’s freezer has broken and so she is having to cook off some of her food including some pork, so tonight we will be picking up a takeaway roast from Shelley’s 😀 She has been able to put some of it in our freezer until hers gets fixed so it’s not too bad, she also made some crumbles and a curries and she has kindly given some to us 🥰

I did think that I would go back outside after stopping for a cuppa at 2.30pm but I think I should take it slowly, after a winter of not doing much I don’t want to over do it and burn myself out. The weather is looking fair for most of the week and positively tropic at the weekend so there will be plenty of time to get stuff done.

There is a rodent of some sort in the greenhouse as all the grain I put down yesterday is gone, I think it is living in with the hibernating torts 🙄 I have set a trap to try and catch it otherwise I won’t be able to sow any pea or bean seeds as they will get eaten. Thinking about the torts, the weekend temperatures that are forecast will probably wake them up so I had a quick look over their outdoor pen and I need to get their out door house ready, some of the hens have been using it over winter in the pol pen. While I was weeding I decided to leave any dandelions where they are for now as I can dig them up for feeding to the torts once they are awake.

John went out to do the afternoon rounds and the heavens opened, he was not happy 😆 but I am as it means anything I have planted today will get a good watering in 😀

Of course it is pancake day today and when the girls were at home I always made pancakes for tea. John doesn’t like pancakes though 🙄 so I didn’t bother today but maybe I will make some for my dessert tomorrow.

Wednesday: John has gone to do a full days work today but he did the animals first. I was not far behind him out on the smallholding, putting in fresh bedding for the ducks, geese and Ted, feeding the Guineas etc. Then I went into the greenhouse for about an hour and a half to get some early seeds sown. The peas and beans that were sown a couple of weeks back are starting to show some shoots and I sowed another couple of batches of peas, we are talking about eight at a time as I don’t want to suddenly have so many that I can’t deal with them. That is one of the restraints you have to place on yourself, not sowing too much at once. This morning I have set up the propagator and have sown, peppers, jalapeño and tomatoes, these all need a long growing period. If you are thinking of getting yours in make sure you will be able to accommodate them with extra heat as they get bigger, the temptation to sow lots of seeds quickly turns into a disaster when the plants are much bigger and you have nowhere warm to bring them on. I have three varieties of tomato in at the minute, indigo cherry which are like the indigo rose only smaller, then some tigerello which are stripy tomatoes and then some yellow cherry tomatoes. I have also sown some garlic chives, dill and coriander, the garlic chives are for adding to pea shoots for salads.

You may notice the shiny stuff behind the propagator, this is to reflect as much light as possible back towards it because the light levels are low at this time of year. I do need to get on and clean the windows of the greenhouse which will help immensely 😜

After a cup of coffee at 10.30, the time is relevant because I find each day without even looking at a clock, I come in for coffee and it’s always around 10.30 🤷‍♀️ Anyway after the coffee I went back outside until 1pm and did a good mornings work I think. First I started with following my plan of yesterday but the soil was claggy, I got as much as I could done before giving up, I had thick layers of mud in my boots, the fork handle and my gloves, on to plan B. I did find a little gooseberry bush growing (self set) so dug that, put it in a big pot and will grow it in the fruit cage where I can prune it more easily. Plan B was to work at the opposite end of the garden to what I had decided yesterday and weed the herb bed, that’s what I spent the rest of the morning doing. The feverfew although it is a herb, is a pain and spreads everywhere so I pulled it all up from there, there are nettles that are growing so they got pulled up as well, it’s very satisfying pulling out a long root of nettle I think, there were plenty of dandelions that thought they were going to make it, nope, out they came and I ended up with a wheelbarrow full of weeds and debris. I did find a couple of ladybirds hibernating so I relocated them to the greenhouse and the beginning of my ladybird empire 😂 1pm and it’s lunchtime and time for an hours sit down before lighting the Rayburn, sorting out dinner for this evening and today it’s my job to do the afternoon feeding and egg collecting. I am pretty pleased with what I have got done out there today, the weather makes such a difference as it was very pleasant, a small amount of rain at one point but nothing major, hopefully there will be plenty more days ahead to get working after a long winter.

Good call coming in and staying in as it is now raining quite well 😜 might do a bit of research or reading for an hour.

So my afternoon panned out rather differently than expected, my good old friends BT and I spent two hours chatting and figuring out why my internet keeps dropping out, apparently an engineer is coming tomorrow 🙄

And I got the call up for my vaccine yaaaaaaaay, next week I will have my first vaccination, it’s amazing actually how emotional it was to get the text, I think it signals the beginning of the end, we have a long way to go still but hopefully at some point this year things will be as near normal as we can get.

Thursday: Oooo an altogether different morning, wet, grey and breezy, not very nice, I am glad I got out on the garden when I could this week. It is still mild though, last night it was around 11c at 9pm 🙄 Looks like today I will mostly be doing indoors stuff 😜

Did some hoovering and polishing, the sun came out in the afternoon but it is a chilly breeze. By that time I was waiting for a cake to cook and getting the Rayburn lit. Take two black bananas, and two overripe pears, mix with some flour, sugar, oil, eggs and chocolate chips and voila something lovely from something not so appetising 😀

BT turned up as they said they would so that’s a bonus, tested everything this end, no faults with equipment so it must be a fault somewhere on the line in the lane 🙄 Internet is still dropping in and out constantly, I reported the same fault last month and they supposedly came out and fixed it, not so well or they wouldn’t be back again would they. Hopefully this time they will do a proper job and sort it once and for all, we had the gigaclear installed through the village a couple of years ago, I might see how much that is or I even considered satellite internet at one point, rural broadband is not the best I can tell you.

After the broadband appeared to be fixed properly, no more drop outs, the rest of the afternoon and early evening went along as usual. We settled down to watch some tv and boom the power went, after establishing it was not anything here that had tripped I called the power company. They had a main cable down and it would be two hours before they could get it back on, darn it, luckily I had charged everything I needed and also the mini hub that BT gave me is a unit you charge so I still had internet and I still had a device 😀 Just as well because I wanted to watch the robot landing on Mars. The power did not come back on after two hours so we went to bed, it came on at 1am 😜 We have on average around four power cuts a year nearly always in the winter months, so we have got used to being prepared, keeping essentials like phone and torches charged and if push came to shove we could always light a campfire to cook dinner and boil a kettle on. I am just glad the power cut was not last week as we would have been freezing 🥶

Friday 😀 Happy Friday everyone, the electric is back on this morning which means we can have cwaffee 🥰 that is good, a morning without coffee is a miserable morning.

It is what is known as a filthy day today, rain on and off all day, wind, grey, altogether ‘orrible 😜 So for the main part I have been making cards, I had some that had been ordered and then I made a few birthday cards as well. Sitting in my little workspace with the radiator on was lovely but I forgot about the rest of the house and when I came out it was cold so I got the Rayburn lit just after lunch. I did the feeding and egg collecting this afternoon, first I had to get a few wheelbarrows of wood from the outside store to the inside area, then on to do the rounds. I noticed the gate to the goose paddock was open, this meant one of two things, either John had forgotten to let them out or he had not shut the gate properly this morning. As I walked up there the tell tale signs of goose footprints told me they were out somewhere, that was ok though as it meant I could get into the nest and retrieve the eggs without having to watch my back! Fed the horses, fed everything else, collected the eggs, got the wood in, got the post in and checked the egg shed ☑️ time for a cuppa ☕️

Saturday: A much better day today, grey and overcast cast but mild and dry. The last couple of weeks of February and the whole of March are the long hard slog towards Spring, it’s almost like you have done a very, very long walk and the last bit is up a steep hill that is wet and muddy, you have to keep going, it’s the end of a difficult journey 😜

We spent the morning cleaning out huts and tidying up paddocks ready for Spring. I cleaned out the ducks, the quail hut, the pol pen, new bedding in the goose hut, cleaned out teds pen, some empty houses etc and John tidied things away from the front paddock, netting that we had taken down and then power washed the front hen hut ready for when they are allowed back out again. We had planned more but decided did we needed to get a bit of shopping in so went off to do that, the jobs will wait until tomorrow.

Today is my youngest sisters 40th birthday 🥳 I was sixteen when she was born, it’s crazy that I had lived a whole childhood before she even came along 😂

Sunday: Oh what a morning we have had, weather is ok, still grey but mild and not raining, well spitting now and again but nothing much. Last night we couldn’t find one of the cats so we left the cat flap undone hoping he would be there this morning, nope. He was there last night at around 7/8 but by 10 he wasn’t, we looked all around, in sheds and outbuildings, I opened Johns van, we called him, nothing. We got on with the morning jobs and then went out the the side paddock, taking down chicken netting, stakes etc and then opened it up for the horses to come into. They have been hanging near the fence for a couple of days, they can see and smell the grass growing and it wouldn’t be long before they bashed the fence down to get in so easier to get it sorted before they take matters into their own hands. After that we came in for a coffee and then John had to go and give his van a bit of a tidy out while I cleaned out the Rayburn ready to light it. John opened the door of the van and guess who jumped out, the cat, why it didn’t come this morning when I looked in there and called it I don’t know but I am glad he is found and safe. I was convinced that as it had just vanished that the fox had taken him but all’s weep that ends well.

I saw a little Jenny wren gathering feathers for nesting this morning, wrens are the most common breeding bird in the UK but they are very quick and tend to keep low to the ground when they are about.

I caught another mouse in the trap in the greenhouse, that’s three so far 🙄 must be a whole colony living in there!

Tomorrow we get an update on how the country will begin to come out of the lockdown, I think it will be a lot slower than people are hoping 🙄

Posted in Friesland Farm

Freezing 🥶 Thawing & Valentines 💘

Monday 8th February 2021: Morning 😀 it’s 9.30am and I have sat down to have a coffee. I have already been out and rolled a wheel of hay to the paddock with John and fed the horses, lit the Rayburn, got a loaf of bread proving, got lunch and this evenings dinner organised, put some washing on, fed the cats and dogs, made an appointment for bloods at the end of the week and a multitude of other little jobs that needed doing. It’s cold outside brrrr , last night the wind gusts kept waking me up, around 10 times I would say as the roof rattles with each one 🙄 It is a crisp, dry cold morning though with a light dusting of snow, actually not a bad morning, at least it’s not raining 😝 John has gone off to work this morning but he doesn’t have a lot on this week so he will be here quite a lot, he said the less he goes to work, the less he wants to go! Not sure what I am going to do today, I plan to sling the hoover round quickly and I have some bits of paperwork to sort out and file, too cold to do much outside so that’s off the list, maybe I will work out what I am going to plant this year and where also what I need to do in order to get going when the time is right. That last bit will be a long list as nothing has been done in preparation as yet, there is cutting back, weeding, mulching and re positioning to do. I had planted a flower bed in the veg garden, that’s because I didn’t have anywhere else to put flowers but now we have the front beds I could move a lot of the bigger stuff and just leave good pollinating plants behind. The calendula which readily self set everywhere are great for the veg plots but the delphiniums, rudbeckia, dahlias etc will be better in the front I think. Each week I wait and hope that the weather will be kind enough to get going and so far each week it hasn’t been, I am sure I will get there in the end 🙄 I have another raised bed to think about at the side now, this one is fairly small in comparison to the others, 8 x 4ft and only one sleeper high. There is a sumac that grows there which I would like to see back again, it has got ravaged when the trees came down but should recover, it’s just a small one but if left could get lovely and big, there is also an elderflower that self set and if I keep that smallish that will be nice too, under those I plan to plant hellebore, snowdrops, for winter interest and probably some good ground cover. I want that bed to be fairly maintenance free if I’m honest as I have plenty of others to keep in order. I also plan to have a bench the other side because we get some fantastic early morning sun there and in the early hours of a summer morning it would be nice to sit and have coffee before the sun gets too hot. If I remember I will get some pics today so that I have before and after, when it eventually gets finished that is 😀

10.30 and it’s trying to snow 🙄 good job I got some leek and potato soup out for lunch today 😀

Snow flurries all day but nothing much is settling so far luckily but by golly it’s cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey!

Mostly I pottered indoors, John came home at lunchtime and did do a bit outside but it was soo cold he gave up and came in. He did the animals in the afternoon while I got the dinner cooked and that’s it for Monday. I rather think that will be similar most days with these temperatures, can’t really do a lot out there and can’t go anywhere else 😂

Tuesday: Oh god it’s only Tuesday 😂 pretty much a Groundhog Day, or same shit different day type of day lol. John did most of the animals this morning before nipping out to do a quick job, I did the horses, Guineas, cats and dogs plus the normal household stuff. I spent a hour getting a shepherds pie ready for dinner this evening, all the while thinking, this will take John approximately 3 minutes flat to wolf down 🙄 Got some veg soup made from my frozen stash, made a couple of cards and did a Lino print. In the afternoon it’s feeding, egg collecting, egg sorting, dinner and that is pretty much the day. Very boring at the minute, can’t really do much outside, it’s freezing, very cold dry air and a cold wind to go with it, not nice and not much to be able to achieve really. John did have a little go at some more of the side driveway but even he got fed up and cold and came in for the afternoon.

I did a fair bit of research in the evening after watching Rick Stein in France where he watched someone pressing their nuts 😛 Walnuts to be exact and I thought well maybe I could do that with our nuts, why not, makes sense to use the resources we have here. What I already knew was that cold pressed oils are better than hot pressed though I wasn’t sure why. Now I know that as the nut meat is heated ready for extraction they lose a lot of their goodness , it was obvious really if I had thought about it enough. The oil industry uses heat as it can extract much more volume but the quality is poorer whereas cold pressed yields lower volumes of higher quality oil. I always buy cold pressed olive oil, we went to an olive grove once in Tuscany and I understood that cold pressed was the best quality you could get so ever since then that’s what I have bought. The harder part of my research was trying to find the best method of extraction, I suppose here in the UK it is not something that is done on a small scale. I imagine that in warmer a Mediterranean climate many homes would have olive trees etc and practise pressing 🤷‍♀️ but here in the UK I think that is rare 😂 I found a few worktop machines that are available, they vary in price and I could not decide if they were worth the investment or not. Then I started thinking about how you could do it with a ready made machine which would be a better option, the nuts need to be crushed and then pressed. Crushing would be easy enough, you could do small batches in the food processor, but the pressing is harder to work out. You can use a hand operated press but my experience with pressing is that you need good hand grip and wrist strength both of which are long gone for me 🙄 some kind of hydraulic aid is needed, I did ask John if it would be possible to convert the log splitter which has 400lb of pressure, it might be an option, I will keep looking to see if there is anything that might work, or I may end up buying a machine 😜

Wednesday: Still really cold, still dry but the sun is shining this morning which makes everything feel better doesn’t it. John did the morning rounds and then went off to do a small job. I had a shower and sorted a few bits before venturing out to sort out the rest of the motley crew. Two years ago today we went on holiday, as it turns out it was the last holiday we had to date 😔 had we known we would have booked in another one later that year lol. Still it was an adventure, we sailed the high seas, and at times they were high 🤢 we crossed the Artic Circle (tick that off the bucket list) and we went to right up to Alta in search of the Northern Lights (storm Eric scuppered those plans 😣) what I would give for a holiday right now 😜

Sorted out what I needed to outside then back in to light the Rayburn which was troublesome today 🙄 I took me over an hour to get it stabilised which is a pain in the arse quite frankly. John has left over shepherds pie for dinner tonight but I got out some gooseberries to make a crumble with and one of our home produced chickens for tomorrow’s dinner. Then I went online to order some more bread flour, during the first lockdown when it was hard to come by I ordered from a whole food company and it is by far the best flour I have used for making bread so far. I ordered bread flour and also plain and self raising as well as a few other bits and pieces. I had a good look through the range they offer and it was a huge range, I was struck by three things. First that 60/70% of the people I know wouldn’t have a clue what half of them were, second that 80/90% of people I know wouldn’t know what to do with them anyway and third that I 100% don’t make full use of everything I grow here! That actually all adds up to a forth and that is that on the whole we, as a ‘modern, white, first world’ population have entirely lost touch with good food ingredients, I can’t include ethnic minorities in that statement because I believe that they still know and do use the majority of these ingredients in cooking. Yes I realise that a percentage of people use fresh ingredients but I also think that they are very basic in their choices as indeed am I really, when you start to really look at what is available we use such a tiny proportion. I shall have to set myself a mission to widen my ingredient usage and really look at the things I grow and broaden the ways I can use/store/preserve them. If you are wondering what the hell is she on about (admit it you were 😜) it’s is things like drying kale and using the powdered form or de hydrating much more produce for use during the winter or really drying plenty of beans and pulses for the same reasons. I have dabbled a little bit, the fruit powders were not terribly successful as I found they burnt a little bit maybe I should try again, and I have done beans and pulses but I should do many more I think. There are so many things I grow both in the veg garden and the flower garden and indeed also includes weeds like plantain, cleavers etc that I don’t use fully and maybe I really should.

That’s what happens when it is too cold outside to get anything much done, I start thinking and looking and learning and then churning it out but it’s a good thing I think, certainly brightens up the day to have a project in mind 😂

I went out in the afternoon and did a few bits mainly defrosting the water tap and hose so that I could get a decent amount of water up to the horses, when they are on ad lib hay they drink a lot. I had to bring the hose connector in and run it under the hot tap, when I finally got it off the tap that was, nothing is easy when it’s freezing weather, I think the temps go down to around -5 at night if not lower. I filled up all the wild bird feeders, they are also eating a lot at the minute as there is nothing else available. Then it was on to putting fresh bedding in for the geese and ducks, I had a look at the hens, I will be so glad when they can get back outside but I’m not expecting that to happen until April really. The stables are ok but not the best environment for them and they need clean bedding every couple of days which has a knock on effect on running costs. Back indoors to top up the Rayburn although when you come in from outside it feels like a sauna 😂 Make a cup of tea and after that I will probably go back out to do the egg rounds and probably put clean bedding in for the hens too.

I had an online discussion about pressing nut oils and it would seem that I can use my Apple scratter and press to do the job so I will probably give that a go later in the year, I don’t have anything to lose by trying it out.

Thursday: I have no idea what the temperature went down to overnight but it was mightily cold this morning! John did the animals while I got dinner in the slow cooker and sorted out the washing etc then it was off to town to have my blood tests. Even though it was market day it was very quiet everywhere, we did a bit of shopping while we were there and then back home.

I wish this cold grip would move on, it’s getting tedious now, hard to get anything done outside, bloody freezing when you do go out and large parts of the day spent indoors where it’s lovely and warm but it makes you feel tired.

My new tree arrived today but I can’t plant it until the frozen weather moves on.

The news is all very depressing 😔 goodness knows when this whole situation will get any better, I think most people are really feeling quite low at the minute. I never thought I would hear the words ‘it is illegal to go on holiday’ 🙄 It is not looking like we have very much to look forward to in the first half of the year at least, fingers crossed for a few months respite in the summer.

I have 30 pallet collars arriving tomorrow 1200 x 1000 we will be using them to re organise the veg beds. Much easier to deal with smaller raised beds that great swathes of garden.

I feel quite despondent today, can you tell 😜 so I bought a gardening magazine to cheer myself up and I think tomorrow I will start writing a list of seeds to start sowing at the beginning of next month. There is plenty to organise really and I will have all these pallet collars to start putting in as well, organising what I will grow where might give me the boost I need at the minute to get me through the rest of this month.

Friday: I got over my self indulgent melancholy and had a pretty busy morning.

Last night the the wind was constant and the metal roof was banging about, for almost three hours I laid awake until I decided to sleep in the living room, that got a bit cold in the early hours so I went back to the bedroom where the wind was somewhat quieter for a while.

John got started on the morning rounds while I whizzed round and did a few things inside before joining him on the yard to get going on cleaning out the hens. We moved the light Sussex from the POL pen into the stable that flooded but is now dry, we moved the hens that were in the small dark stable out to the POL pen so they can get some natural light and air, we then cleaned out that stable. Probably around seven to eight wheelbarrows full of sawdust and chicken poo 😝 We then put in all clean sawdust and moved half of the hens from the stable at the back into the smaller stable, the rest will stay where they are, the reason being that the fewer hens in one place the less meets they get in or at least it takes longer to get in a mess. They also tend to break a lot of eggs when there is 30 of them all in together, hopefully now they all have more space there will be less breakages as well. The other lot of hens in a different stable keep relatively clean as there are only about 16 of them, while I was in there putting in fresh straw for laying in one was about to lay, I got my phone out and took a video, it’s rare you actually see an egg being laid 😮

The chap came and dropped off the pallet collars I ordered and then it was time to come in and light the Rayburn, it’s still pretty bitter and the wind has not let up at all, hopefully it will be above freezing tomorrow as we still can’t use the outside taps or hoses🙄

Afternoon rounds consisted of egg collecting, feeding and bucketing water up to the horses and geese. John thinks the geese are getting close to laying as the gander is getting more fierce by the day, geese begin to lay around Valentine’s Day so hopefully they will be right on cue this weekend 🥰

Tomorrow we will clean out the remaining stable, ran out of time today and that will be them all done for at least a week 😝 We can also look at where the pallet collars will be going as I haven’t quite decided on a design yet.

Saturday: Up and about, John went out to do the feeding and I sorted stuff out indoors before going out to help with the last stable cleaning. My god it was bloody freezing, I mean freezing 🥶 the wind chill even at 9.30 must have been around -6, it is the wind that is the problem, even barrowing back and forth I could not warm up my finger tips and hips even with good clothing on. In the end I said to John I can’t do this its too cold so I came in to light the Rayburn and get dinner sorted for this evening while he carried on. I think this problem I have been having with the ends of my fingers is the problem, they hurt like billyo even inside thick warm gloves. Hopefully this evening the temperature is going to come up to 1c and stay above freezing, our average winter temps are between 1c and 7c so you can see why a whole week of continuous below freezing is unusual and hard work. Some where in Scotland it went down to -21 I think, that’s insane for the UK 🙄 Our weather seems to become more extreme year on year, record heat, record cold and record rainfall is becoming normal and the seasons seem to be shifting slightly too, any veg grower will tell you that they need to adapt all the time for growing and harvesting.

Sunday: Be careful what you wish for! The temperature finally came up above freezing sometime during the night and as a consequence we had a burst pipe out the back on the dog shower, good job we have a live in plumber 😜 It had drained all the hot water so the shower I was going to have didn’t happen, it was still cold this morning and I was looking forward to a hot shower. I lit the Rayburn first thing, not in the best of moods when it’s cold and I can’t warm up at all. It’s Valentine’s Day, not that it makes much difference in our house, although I organised a dine in for two on Friday evening and have organised afternoon tea for today, John as usual did nothing, no flowers, no card, no nothing, thanks pal, that has not made my mood any better I can tell you 😜 It’s no surprise really, I used to have tell John to take his Mum flowers or she would never have got any then he would take all the credit when his Mum was delighted 🙄 Like many women, for the first probably 25 years after we got married I always organised the birthday presents and cards etc then one year I said to him that he needed to take over remembering his Mum and Dads birthday and getting them something, that resulted in his Mum getting a bunch of artificial flowers and he never even noticed the difference 😂

It’s definitely warmer by a few degrees and guess what, it’s raining, jeez can’t we just have a nice day, Winter seems sooo long at the best of times but this year it is just endless.

We had our afternoon tea, although there was quite a lot of it so we have saved some for another time, then it was time to do the animals again and that is another week done and dusted. Time relentlessly marches on regardless of anything in its path, that is the one consistent thing in life, time and tide waits for no man 😜 same time next week, see ya 👋

Posted in Friesland Farm

Spring begins its awakening, and then plummets back into winter 😝

Monday February 1st 2021: Imbolc, the midway point between the Winter solstice and the Spring equinox, the beginning of the return of Spring, St Brigid’s day (who also happens to be the patron saint of chicken farmers amongst others) there are plenty of customs and traditions surrounding the day but for me it is definitely celebrating the turning of the wheel towards Spring and all its glory 🌸 🌼🌷🌻

John has returned to his ‘proper job’ this month so today for the first time in a while I am here on my own for the day. He did go out and feed most of the birds before he went though bless him, I need to get out and sort the horses and the Guineas. First and foremost I got the house bits done, some washing up, washing on, rubbish out, feed the cats and dogs, have breakfast etc etc all at my own leisure 😀 It is great having John around but it is more restricting when you have someone else to cater for and work around all day long 😜 So what is on my agenda, well a lot will depend on the weather and I think we are in for more heavy rain at some point in the early part of the week and of course it is still quite cold this morning. I do have a few seeds to sow, lemon grass which I love growing as it smells amazing, I have some garlic chives I want to get growing and probably today I will spent a small amount of time in the greenhouse checking over what is already in there and maybe a bit of tidying and sorting. At some point I need to give the poly tunnels and the greenhouse glass a good wash to maximise the light getting in and no doubt I will find jobs as I go round. Yesterday I spotted a pot of snowdrops in the cold frame, lovely little white heads bobbing gracefully on the end of the slender green stalks, I had thought I had lost them all. There were plenty here when we came but with the constant re arranging of areas I had forgotten that I dug them up and potted them, happy discovery 🥰

I went out and did the things I needed to get done (it is pretty cold out, not frozen but not mild either) had a look round in the greenhouse, nothing much to report. It feels like I am waiting…..waiting for the vaccines so start making an impact, waiting for things to start bursting into life, just waiting and waiting for something that signals life is beginning to shift and change 🙄 It’s been a tough, long Winter and we could all really do with some sunshine on the horizon. Don’t get me wrong I am under no illusion that life is going to get back to normal anytime soon, I think the process will be long and slow but I am hoping there will be some kind of normality coming our way.

I got the Rayburn lit and then once that settled down I had a few bits of paperwork and bills to sort out.

Well I would have got some bits done except that he internet keeps dropping in and out 🙄 I reported the fault over a week ago and luckily we have a mini hub which they activated back then, it settled down and has been fine all week and now it’s started playing up again, I can only hope it’s because they are fixing it, what are the chances 😏

Tuesday: It’s 11am and have sat down with a coffee. John did the feeding again this morning before going to work 😀 At my leisure I had breakfast, put some washing on, fed the cats and dogs, went out to feed the horses, put the eggs out and then spent an hour doing some weeding on that front bed. It is nice and mild out but very very soggy underfoot after yet more heavy rain overnight, it does not take much to soak everything after the amount of rain we have had over the last week. As it was quite pleasant I thought I could probably weed the bit of the bed I could reach from the pathway, it is very claggy and I almost stopped after my gloves got completely clogged but decided to carry on regardless. I would have done more except I remembered that I needed to make some bread so that was a good time to break and have coffee at the same time. I came in through the the kitchen and out to the boot room to take off my coat and wellies, noticed the cat had knocked over an egg box that had two eggs in it, I cleared it up and then realised I had left the kitchen door ajar. Then ensues a game of cat and human, the cat got in the house, we have had this a few times, it’s Jack and he likes to make you chase him and try and get him out from hidey holes 😜 It is exactly how you can imagine it would be but eventually he gives up and goes back out to the boot room. We need to work out what to do about the eggs in boxes because the cats have taken to sharpening their claws on the boxes totally ravaging them and breaking any eggs in the process. I would have hoped that by now they would be spending more time outside but it seems although they were born in a barn they rather prefer a comfy, cosy boot room to lounge around in all day and night! They have also worked out that if they knock a box over that is partially filled they get broken eggs 🙄 and an extra feast 😂 I assume as the days get longer and warmer and I am spending more time outside, they will too 🤷‍♀️

I am avoiding lighting the Rayburn until much later, I lit it around midday yesterday and we were sweating by the evening as it was so much milder out 😂

I had intended to get something ‘useful’ achieved but as ever those little jobs took over. A delivery, the postbox, lunch, sort out the ring doorbell, bread making. The ring doorbell has not been working, it has gone offline, who gave it permission for that I don’t know 🤷‍♀️ anyhow I decided to get it in and charge it and sort it out. I discovered that when John put it back up in a slightly difference place, the security screws could not be fully screwed in, no wonder it’s not bloody working. Honestly it was a simple enough job, we took it down, including the back plate, to install a cover over the top because of the rain affecting it, the cover had to come back off for some reason that John explained but I can’t remember. He put the unit back up without the cover and it never worked, I assumed it was because of bad weather, but no today when I went to get it in I discovered the problem of the security screws. Basically there is not enough room to get the screwdriver at an angle that you can fully screw them in (there was room before the alteration) as there is a fence in the way. Actually, thinking about it I’m not sure that affects the working of the unit but even so 🙄 I will get it charged, get it back online and put it back up myself, properly this time.

Wednesday: Not much to report today, the weather was fairly mild again but we are looking at another beast from the east arriving at the weekend. With that in mind I have ordered more hay wheels for the horses to keep them going. John did the feeding this morning just leaving the horses, Guineas, dogs and cats for me to get done. I then spent half an hour or more trying to get the ring doorbell working, I was walking around the front trying to see where the wifi drops out. I think since we have re insulated and cladded the signal strength is too poor to reach to the gate next to the egg shed. It reaches about half way but that’s no use really as we have cctv that can see that far, the doorbell was for, well doorbell enquiries really 🙄 So I deactivated it, cancelled the subscription for video capture storage and put it up for sale, by 5.30 it was sold and gone and I need to go back to an old fashioned door bell. To be honest I’m quite glad, it constantly went off with egg customers coming and going plus if I wasn’t in the connection while trying to talk to someone was not the best.

We rang the bell and clapped our hands for Captain Sir Tom Moore tonight, he really did become a national treasure, he inspired people and gave people hope during some very depressing times through the pandemic RIP. He had an amazing 100th year, raising over 30 million (in a very short space of time), becoming an honorary Colonel, an honorary member of the England cricket team, a number one hit, a world record being the oldest person to have a number one hit, a royal variety performance, an honorary doctorate, birthday messages from the Queen, members of the royal family, the Prime Minister and receiving a knighthood, but what he gave was so much more so so many people, hope and perseverance 🥰

Thursday: A wet day again today, although the morning was dry just as I decided it was time for a walk the rain started. Not to be deterred I carried on anyway but was soaked through by the time I got back, good job I had lit the Rayburn before going out. The task was to get my coat and gloves dry before it was time to go out and do the animals, it was my wax jacket (which obviously needs rewaxing) the rain had got in somehow and I needed to get it dry again because putting on a wet coat to go out is not nice at all. Anyhow I was saved by the fact that John came home earlier than expected 😀 and so he did them lol. I had Mia for the day as she, like a lot of school children, is beginning to struggle emotionally with the lockdown and being at home all the time. She came over for the day so that she could have time to herself and do something different. Shelley, Josh and Flo came over to join us on the walk, we were all soaked but we had a lovely time splashing in puddles and letting the rain drip down our faces. I did feel really sad when Josh cried because he could not come in to nanny’s house, it s heartbreaking really but between us adults we had agreed that I would form a childcare bubble with Sam to help out with things got tough. I am pretty sure Shelley could do with the break as well but at the minute sadly it has to be this way 😔 I had to peel off Mia’s clothes and put them to dry by the Rayburn so she spent a couple of hours wrapped in a blanket on the sofa with a hot water bottle watching the tv. We had made biscuits in the morning so we had a snack and a drink and a rest while we warmed up and dried off. The biscuits are a really simple recipe from Mary Berry, the more of her recipes I use, the more I choose to do, they always turn out as expected. These are called fork biscuits use three ingredients (four if you include chocolate chips) and are easy enough for little children to do.

100g (4oz) butter, softened 50g (2oz) caster sugar 150g (5oz) self-raising flour, mix it all together, form 16 balls, press down with a fork that is dipped in water and bake at 180c for about 10 minutes or until the edges are just turning golden, I leave them to cool for a while until I move them as they are still quite soft while they are hot. We added some cocoa powder and chocolate chips but you could add whatever flavours you have or like. I can’t show you a picture as Mia took them home to share with George, Lucie, Mummy & Daddy, we gave one each to Josh and Flo too.

Friday: A lovely mild, sunny morning so far. I have done all the usual things plus fill up the wild bird feeders, I have a hay delivery coming at lunchtime but have stopped midway during the hoovering to have a coffee 😜 I have plenty to get on with and we are expecting the temperature to drop tonight and have a snow warning for Saturday into Sunday so we will see how that pans out. With that in mind I thought I would get all the house jobs done so that I can maybe sit and doing some crafting over the weekend. I am still waiting for some paper to arrive before I can do the Lino prints, hopefully that will arrive today. I keep looking at the garden but yet again overnight we had some heavy rain so the ground is totally sodden and it’s not worth compacting it by treading all over it. We could really do with a dry period now, the long range forecast does not look too bad as far as rain goes. I always find February a long month, which is ironic as it’s the shortest, but it is almost a long slow plod towards warmer days and crucially warmer soil, we will get there, we always do, time keeps on marching on and the wheel keeps turning 🌝

The rain is back and hammering down again, we are so waterlogged, not just our paddocks but all around the area and parts of the country 😏 My heart actually sinks when I hear the rain becoming harder.

When I was getting the dustbin back in this morning I noticed the little crocus that we planted a couple of years ago in the grass under the cooking apple tree. When the crocus open thats when you will see the first bees of the year flying around 🐝 And talking of bees I am doing an online beekeeping course 😀 Hopefully, if I think I can look after bees ok I will order my first bee hive and some bees. I also hatched a plan to breed ladybirds lol, last year I bought the larvae for the brassica cage but I figured if I can find a bunch of ladybirds as they come out of hibernation and put them in the greenhouse I should be able to get eggs and hatch them 🤷‍♀️

Saturday: Foggy this morning and it got heavier as the morning went on but by the afternoon it had cleared. It was cold as well first thing, we did the morning rounds, I cleaned out the guinea pigs and put fresh bedding in all the other pens/stables and then I started to help John with the side driveway, my toes were getting colder and colder and I had to change into my isotherm wellies which are much warmer. We got a temporary small gate up, none of the merchants can get hold of any at the minute so we have a piece of ply instead. We took the old fence and gate down and then the fox chap turned up, there are a few problems on the farms around us and we have nightly visits here, they are trying to dig into the stables where the hens are at the minute. A quick chat turned into an hour talking about all kinds of things by this time is was lunchtime so I went in to stick the kettle on and make bacon rolls. Shelley came to get some eggs so that was another chat over the fence for a while, time to light the Rayburn and have a sit down 😂 we haven’t got very far in the last few hours today. I did go online and order a uk grown silver birch to plant in the area and they also had a good deal on some cherry plum trees so I really had to buy them too 😜

Sunday: Not as cold as I thought it was going to be this morning but the temps have plunged this afternoon and the wind is bitterly cold. The forecast is for seven days below zero 🥶 a mini beast from the east, many places have snow but we don’t….yet! We did the animals rounds and then John did a bit on the side driveway, moving a layer of mud that has built up over the past couple of years. We treated ourselves to a costa this morning and I also booked a takeaway roast dinner from the pub in the next village along 😀 Got to have a few treats in this lockdown winter. Apart from the usual jobs we haven’t done much else today, I have been doing a bit of Lino cutting and printing but that’s it really.

Another week over and hopefully another week nearer to normality 🙄 Its going to be a cold one, below freezing which means carrying water to the paddocks and breaking ice on what’s already there. I am hoping the ground will freeze overnight so I can get a wheel of hay rolled out to the horses, filling up a tonne bag and dragging it out is pretty hard work when the ground is churned up with wet mud. Oh the joys of a winter on the smallholding, oh wait there are no joys 😂