Posted in Friesland Farm

Harvest Moon

I have been writing things down as I go along this week otherwise I usually find I cant remember what I did and write the blog in a haphazard way.

After our weekend away the first job on the list was picking as this had not been done since the Thursday before, there were plenty of beans, cucumbers and tomatoes plus a few raspberries. We also decided to harvest the pumpkins, spaghetti squash and the onions before the first frost catches us unaware, they are now in the small poly tunnel drying off, the skins need to harden on the squash and the onions need to dry so that they can be stored overwinter.

On Tuesday a friend came to visit, remember the one with the bees and lucky me I got a little gift of honey, I have resisted pooh bear behaviour and have not opened it and stuck my finger in, but I can hear it calling me from the cupboard so I am sure it wont be long before I do!

Wednesday was a busy day starting with the usual routine of feeding everything, then I went on to clean out the dog kennels, we have some lovely smelling (bubblegum flavour) disinfectant that we use, I am not sure the dogs like it very much but it makes the chore that little bit more pleasant for me. The dogs had a treat of sardines to help with their coat for the coming months and we were all pretty pleased with ourselves. The pigs are doing a great job at eating up any surplus apples and veg, they have also been given some powdered milk that was left over from the lambs, we also gave some of the powder to the chickens, I mix in some oil with their pellets and then mix in the powder to coat the pellets, they have been moulting and the calcium will give them a bit of a boost with new feather production. I can report that since creosoting the coops the dreaded red mite have gone thank goodness, and we have just been given four containers of creosote so that will keep us going for a while. The battery was a bit low on the chicken paddock and as a result some have found a way out, luckily when they have laid an egg they make a complete racket about it, one was in the front paddock in the long grass laying, one has been in the hay barn laying, I just hope I am finding all the eggs as the numbers are still down, I counted sixty two laying hens and we are getting about twenty four eggs a day, quite a lot are on a free ride at the minute!

We have had a holiday horse for a few days, he was staying in the front paddock, we taped off the apple tree but he soon learnt that there was no electric on there and was helping himself to a free lunch. Our horses have now come off next doors paddock as they are moving, we moved them to the back and decided they could eat of the strip that runs down the side of the ménage as the grass has got quite long, I let them out and within five minutes they had decided the field looked like a better option and jumped the top rail to get to it, we have left them there as it would just be a continuing circle of getting them out and them jumping back in besides that field needs eating off too before the wet weather flattens it all.

A couple of the days were spent having a good tidy up, the other coops that were creosoted in August have now been put away for the Winter, they have been stacked and covered with tarpaulin, when we come to need them again they will have a quick coat applied and be ready to use a couple of days after that. The clearing up included having a bonfire, on a farm it is very wise to pick your moments to do this, obviously it could not be done during the heatwave when everything was tinderbox dry, it is also a good idea to take note of any wind and what direction it is blowing as we have a barn full of very dry hay! It was worrying moment when I had forgotten I had lit it that morning and came out in the afternoon to see smoke, realisation dawned, fleeting moment of panic over.

The temperature had taken a turn for the colder a couple of days ago although it is mild again as I type this, the heater was needed to take the chill off the evening air and so I decided that some comfort food was in order, we had a lovely piece of braised beef with onions, and mashed potato, beans and carrots all from the garden, followed by and apple and raspberry pie, delicious, that’s the only good thing about the winter months, the smell of a long slow cooked piece of meat waiting for you when you come in. I made extra large portions of everything so that some of it could be frozen for those days when I just don’t have time to cook.

I am very aware that there is a lot of picking still to be done, the apples, the plums, blackberries, elderberries, some elderberries will be given to the chickens and they make a nice addition to an apple pie, I also noticed that the sloes were abundant this year, I have not tried anything with those yet but hope to have a go at sloe gin if I get round to picking any. I have a large quantity of green tomatoes still outside, the plants have given me plenty of ripe ones but as the temperature drops they are slowing down, green tomato chutney is delicious with cold ham around Christmas time, if anyone wants any to have a go come and get some. I have been jotting down notes to formulate a plan for the veg garden, what was good, what was not, what needs clearing and mucking and where to plant some winter veg, broad beans can go in soon and the poly tunnel will be used to grow early crops of peas and carrots. I also have some green manure to plant, this grows on a vacant patch and then you dig it back in Spring, it helps in many ways, firstly it prevents any nutrients being washed away by wet weather, secondly it helps to stop any compaction of the soil because the roots are busy finding their way around the dirt and lastly once you dig it back in it feeds the soil ready for the new plants, as long as you don’t forget you planted it and let it go to seed (as I did one year and it spread everywhere) , it is a great help.

Quick update on the leaks last week, the gutter in the stable area was full of debris from the trees and so was blocked up, that has now been sorted and the leak in the kitchen ceiling was caused by Hubby not clearing up after himself when he cleaned to flue from Rosie, he left the deposits on the roof and it caused the rain to back up near a bolt and find its way inside, needless to say he got a telling off and now all is well 😉

The windy weather has taken its toll on the bean stalks, three of them have gone over but I am still picking beans from them as the roots remained in the ground, although with the colder, wet weather the foliage is beginning to deteriorate and it won’t be long before they start to go over. Then the job of tidying up the plot for resting will begin in earnest, I love it when the growing season begins but I also love the satisfaction of clearing it all ready for next time.
Look out for the Harvest Moon this Wednesday 19th, its a bit early this year as the autumnal equinox is on the 22nd, it is just a normal full moon really but I love the fact that it has got a name relating to the time of year in the northern hemisphere.

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Posted in Friesland Farm

Water!

The topic this week has to be water in its different forms, firstly because we spent a lovely weekend by the sea, courtesy of our daughters for our Pearl wedding anniversary. We went to the Cary Arms in Babbacombe, Devon, a five star boutique hotel and if you ever get the chance or the inclination I would certainly recommend a stay there. The setting is picture perfect, you couldn’t actually get any closer to the beach without being on a boat, the room was large and comfortable, the food was superb, the staff were efficient and friendly and the private terrace overlooking the bay was a treat each morning when I got up early to watch the Sunrise. We took a stroll along the quiet, pebbled beach on the first morning before breakfast and you could have been in the Mediterranean  it was that idyllic!

The next batch of water was the rain, we desperately needed it and so (unlike me, I know) I am not going to complain, not about the downpour watering the garden and the fields at any rate. My complaint came when water started pouring through the kitchen ceiling this morning, great we have a leak in the roof, I went over to the stable block and the internal guttering is leaking, great, we have another leak, right outside of Jacks stable making the dirt floor a soggy mess, I turn to go to the bottom of the stable block and I am not sure yet if its another leak or if the guttering was just not coping, either way there is water gushing in and another soggy mess on the floor, the to do list for Hubby is already written!

Apart from the animals and birds all looking a little bit wet, they are much the same as normal, we have some new additions, three little piggies called Alvin, Simon and Theadora, they are Oxford Sandy and Blacks, a rare, traditional breed, so we were lucky to find them. The main reason for having pigs at this time of year is to use up the windfall apples and gluts of vegetables, they have been greedily tucking in to the fresh produce and when you watch them eat you know why they are called pigs, fighting over a piece of apple or banana is common. At the minute they are in one of the stables, they had not been outside at all since they were born although we will be transferring them to an outside run when Hubby gets to that particular job on his list!

Since I went away on Friday I have not yet had time to look in the veg garden, there is probably plenty of produce waiting to be picked but I was reluctant to get soaking wet doing it this morning, now at least I know I can easily feed the surplus cucumbers to the piglets instead of trying to find recipes for them. I did pick a few bits this morning very quickly, sweetcorn, celery, potatoes and an onion, to make a sweetcorn chowder for a friend who is visiting tomorrow, I hope she likes it. The egg number is slowly increasing from the laying stock but not back up to full production yet.  We have been selling plenty of the point of lay hens and wont be buying any more in until Spring now, so whatever is left will go into the laying pen with the others. I don’t think the new ducks have started to lay yet, they will probably all go at once and I will have more than I need, that’s the time to do some batch baking for the freezer.

I have heard that we are in for an invasion of hornets! I hope that particular rumour is untrue, we seem to go through stages of insects, the flies were an absolute pain during the sunny days, always a loud buzzy one flying around and dive bombing you while you were trying to watch the news. Then there are the wasps, you need close inspection before picking up a windfall or plum off of the tree, they might have got there before you and give you a nasty surprise, luckily I have not been stung yet, even though each morning when I am picking beans I am surrounded by the Bumble Bees searching for nectar. Spiders, of various hugeness, are now rearing their ugly little heads indoors as the days get cooler, Hubby was waiting for a scream from the general area of the toilet roll holder the other day when a one the size of a football (nearly 😉 decided to roost there, very mean of hubby not to remove it I thought, but I didn’t cry out, I merely gave the spider my best, bugger off back to where you came from stare, and lo and behold he was gone by the morning.  After that lot we now have the invasion of the earwig, they are on everything, I just had to eject one from the crawling up the inside of my trouser leg, to be fair, none of them are dangerous unless you are allergic, but I will be glad when it is too cold for them to bother coming out to play.

Cary Arms
The Cary Arms, a delightful little bolt-hole by the sea
Two of the three little pigs!
Two of the three little pigs!
Posted in Friesland Farm

Rosie is good to go :)

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One of the big jobs this week was to give Rosie her annual de coke, since letting her out when spring finally arrived she has not been touched, so we took the flue apart and cleaned that then worked downwards taking out all the grate and cleaned all the internal flues. Afterwards I gave her a clean and polish on the outside and now she is all shiny and ready to go whenever the weather decides to turn 🙂

We have been busy enough to cross off a fair few jobs this week including finishing creosoting the big hen coop, we have done everything we can now to get the hens laying again, got rid of the mites, wormed them, given them some poultry spice but still they are reluctant to go into full production. The, dare I say it, lack of rain is probably a factor but there is not much we can do about that, the ground is bone dry and the grass is beginning to die off, the only moisture at the minute is from the dew after the colder nights, not that I am complaining we very much deserved a good summer and this year has been great. One of the benefits of fine weather is the magnificent sunsets we are having, last night was especially good, glowing very red, I took the photograph below last night, and have heard that lots of other people also took photos so it must have been pretty spectacular.

The harvest is stepping up to its most productive now, we have some lovely eating apples from the tree in the front paddock, cooking apples from the tree in the driveway, greengage, damson, and Victoria plums, and the veg garden is still going strong with tomatoes, cucumbers, runner beans, sprouting and sweet corn. There are busy days ahead, picking in the morning and prepping in the afternoon, the nuts will be falling next and collecting them up takes a good hour or so each day. The plum trees have had grease bands wrapped around the trunks, these will catch the codling moth grubs that climb up in the spring and hopefully won’t spoil the fruit next year.

Short and sweet this week as I have a heavy schedule lol, we are off to Devon for the weekend on Friday for two days R and R, bliss, I can’t wait to be by the seaside and watch the waves crashing in.

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Posted in Friesland Farm

Better late than never, hope you enjoyed the bank holiday :)

Every bank holiday this year has had great weather so we can’t complain about that!

We have had a busy few days this week with one thing or another, the farrier came to do the horses feet and bought his very entertaining four year old with him, he had a captive audience of adoring women laughing at his stories about his pony, Mike the Knight and his wish to have two Dalmatians, so that he can have lots of Dalmatians lol.

We have had a party of campers over the weekend, my niece wanted to camp for her birthday and so friends and family arrived with tents and set up, it was a lovely evening, the rain stayed away, at least until the morning, we ate heartily, sat by the fire pit, and had breakfast on the barbie in the morning (which yet again was my favourite bit). We were expecting picnickers on Sunday from the other side of the family but the little girl went down with a sickness bug so that will wait for another time.

The never ending task of getting rid of the red mite has continued, all the small huts have now been taken apart, washed with jeyes fluid and creosoted, a most unpleasant job but one that had to be done. We re-assembled the hut that was completed, put Vaseline on the ends of the perches to catch any strays, put it into an empty pen then caught all the hens and dusted them before putting them in the pen. There are still red mite! Arrrrggghhh, the difference is that the numbers are small and hopefully we can keep on top of them, with Winter approaching they will be less of a problem.
With the lack of eggs from the hens, I decided to look around for some laying ducks, we picked up six today and I hope we will at least have plenty of ducks eggs on offer, trying to keep the customers coming back for when we have plenty is the main aim. I have been keeping the little shed full of produce so at least there is something to tempt them. The ducks seem to have settled in well with the others, although at the time of writing this we have not yet tried to put them to bed, could be a long evening when we do.
The cockerels finally had their last day on Saturday, seven birds to dispatch and sort, as they were all about two years old we decided to use them for dog feed, they were hybrid and quite lean so not enough for a good roast. Two more of them escaped the fate of the others, the one that free ranges permanently, if he suddenly disappears we will know there is a fox about, and the gold laced Orpington has been allowed to stay with his ladies for the time being. It is a little bit quieter round here at daylight now.

The cucumbers continue to sprout in magnificent numbers, they must be at their peak soon, if only the tomatoes were the same, I could sell lots of those, it’s always the way I guess. The runner beans seem to be slow, and a lot of them are shorter than usual but there are plenty on there, the soft fruit has now gone over with the exception of a few Autumn raspberries but not enough to fill a punnet each day sadly, must make a note to plant more for next year. The pumpkin patch is looking magnificent, the foliage is all dying off to reveal big balls of orange hiding underneath, it is probably the best pumpkin harvest I have had to date.

I finally got round to making some jam today, but not from anything I have grown, I made an impulse buy on the way back from collecting the ducks, the cherries for sale in the layby lured me in and so now I have a few jars of black cherry jam, mmm delish, I should make a Black Forest gateaux but I think a Victoria sponge will have to do. I have so many projects I want to get on with but day to day stuff always takes up the time, some of it very boring too, this week I will mainly be doing paperwork, I have a lot to get through, about three days worth I reckon, yawn, still once it’s done my mind will be free to think about cheese making and painting my milk urn.

The nighttime visitors seem to have increased with the darker nights, we have a hedgehog and last night I think, judging by Kai persistently barking, a fox is checking us out, we have set the trap just in case, but worse than that, on Saturday night, the biggest rat I have ever seen literally crossed the doorstep! Hubby managed to shoot it when we found it strolling across the drive, I think it was already poisoned as it was not as fast as I would have expected it to be, I hope it does not have extended family living near by!

Blackberry picking season is almost upon us which coincides nicely with the apple harvest, that means lots of pies and crumbles for the Winter nights, I have plenty of windfalls if anyone would like some, at the minute they are all over the drive and grass verge because I have not had time to pick them up, it is a shame to let them go to waste, I do have a sign saying help yourself and some customers do but obviously not enough to clear them up for me 😉

Posted in Friesland Farm

Extra musings, because I can!

I try not to get political in the blog, we all have different points of view and that’s healthy, but the one thing we all have in common is that we need to eat to survive. Having just completed a survey on future food sustainability I thought I would air my views, small though they are!

The survey throws in big words such as, intensification, biodiversity, global distribution etc, most of this means nothing to your average shopper and nor should it, the message in my opinion should be much simpler, Think about what you buy! Do you need it, will you use it or will it end up in that awful little food waste bin, those in my opinion should never have got past the drawing board. The simple fact is that we waste far too much food as a country, and the beginning of the process starts way back at the docks, importing thousands of tons of food from around the world when common sense tell us we should be using local resources first. Now I am no saint and I do grab and buy if I am in a hurry but I use these rules if I can, LOCAL, ENGLISH, EUROPEAN, WORLDWIDE, it is after all difficult to grow bananas in Oxfordshire and I do like bananas. What happened to the bubble and squeak dinner on a Monday, or using up what is in the fridge once a week, or the simple task of freezing leftovers, these are all things I do on a weekly basis but is it just me? Seasonal is another word that should be used more forcefully, you can buy almost anything all year round these days, is that good practice? Would we go into meltdown if we couldn’t buy a certain vegetable or ingredient for our recipe or would we be more like our ancestors and use what was available at the time. It’s complex I know and we have become a nation that expects it to be there when we want it, BUT at what cost, will it be there when we NEED it, a global food Armageddon is on the horizon, might be a few years away yet but you don’t have to be clever to do the maths, Earths population is growing and there is finite land available for growing on.

If you think about one topic this week, make it your shopping, do you need it, will you use it, if not can you freeze it and use it for soup or feed it to the dog instead if his usual biscuits. Be proud of yourself if you don’t have to put out that stinky little food waste bin, or there is as little as possible in it. Make an effort to use up what you already have, you might even been surprised by the results, don’t waste anything, it’s your hard earned money you are throwing away, and don’t think for one minute that your small effort alone is not worth it, as someone once said, ‘one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind’ if we all take small steps we can make a difference.

Posted in Friesland Farm

40 Cucumbers!

This morning I have picked 40 of the little blighters, it has been the best year year for cucumbers, I need a bigger outlet for some things I think!

This is the time of year I love the most, fresh mornings with the promise of warmth through the day, I have been getting up early just to enjoy the cold air, an early start also means I can rattle through the feeding then go onto picking. It takes a couple of hours every other day to pick and pack the veg ready for putting out into the shed, but it disappears quicker than anything, especially the runner beans, which is brilliant. This is also the time of year when I start to think about next year, not as premature as you might think, time to assess what grew well, what sold well, what to grow more of next year and where to grow it. The disappointment this year has been the tomatoes and melon in the new tunnel, mostly because we used grow bags instead of planting into the ground, so that is something that will go on the list to change. I also start thinking about what can be grown in the poly tunnel over winter to give us a fresh crop of veg, mostly greens and brassicas, probably a few potatoes and carrots for Christmas time as well.

The hens have started to pick up their laying a little bit, still nowhere near the numbers we were getting before, one of the problems has been the red mite and we decided to bite the bullet and get proper creosote to paint the huts in, the mite do not like the smell and hopefully will stay away, the modern alternatives just do not do the job as well as the old fashioned methods but sometimes you just have to resort to a chemical or two. I have just come in from reassembling the hut that we did, spraying the big hut and shutting them out until we can do that one, I have put out a dust bath with louse powder in and put powder in the nesting boxes, urgh it’s horrible. I burnt the bedding straight away and spray the hut I took apart, I will sort these little buggers if its the last thing I ever do!
The baby quail have been selling well and I now only have four left, I may decide to hatch some more so that there are always a few for sale, they are so easy to keep and look after, no trouble at all. One of my ducks is still trying to nest but she is not setting, so she gets off every day to go and play with the others, this is not much use at all and I need to work out a way to encourage her to stay on, although its a bit late in the year now so that will have to wait until spring I think.

This time of year is also great for tidying up which is what we have been doing, cutting hedges and trimming trees, clearing up anything that has gone over, not too much though there are still seed heads and a few flowers around for the birds and bees. One of the trees we leave until spring is the buddliea, they flowered about a month ago and this weekend you probably could have counted around 200 butterflies of all colours flitting around them, they are big bushes but I was amazed at how much activity was going on.

We are contemplating the idea of glamping in one of the fields, we were considering caravans but the chap up the road has just got permission for fifteen so we thought a different angle might be more suitable to our rustic look. We will spend the winter months researching it and see if it will be viable so watch this space next year.

I have been so busy catching up on jobs that were not done when I was feeling poorly that I have not had time to do any baking or freezing, just the one batch of pickle so far, not that it matters too much as we still have stuff in the freezer from last year, especially plums. The plum harvest looks good again this year, I have been round to check them and see how they are progressing, not quite ready to pick just yet, and the nuts are just beginning to form inside the shell so they will be a few more weeks yet as well.

The cats are very busy catching their own dinner at the minute, there is an abundance of baby rabbits and mice to be had after the harvesting in the fields around us, you can tell when they have a catch they make a noise that sounds like a young child crying, they come wandering up the farm track very proudly with it in their mouths, then leave the entrails lying around for us to step on, still it saves me feeding them for a while. They usually spend all night hunting and then laying around all day in the hay barn so to look at them you would think they were quite lazy, but I can assure you they are doing their job well.

Right, I am off to do some more work while I have the inclination, if anyone has a recipe for cucumbers I would be interested!

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Posted in Friesland Farm

How do you turn a pumpkin into a splendid coach?

Well it’s Monday again and I have been a bit intermittent with the blogging so I need to get back on track if only to remind myself of where I am at!

After weeks of not being able to do much, I am on the road to recovery and of course raring to get at all the jobs that have been left, I need to pace myself though as I will be in danger of burning myself out, so a good idea to take some time to sit down and blog to you all.

We spent the weekend in Wales visiting Dad and it was a lovely restful time, the lush green valleys are peaceful and the weather was not bad this time. I noticed a complete contrast when we got back over the border, the green fields become gold and the activity of harvesting is well underway here, combines and tractors full of seed are on every road doing their best to get it all in and feed the masses. I have spent most of the morning picking veg, there was plenty to put out for sale, the runner beans have at last become long enough to pick, I have purple sprouting, French beans, courgettes, tomatoes and the biggest pile of cucumbers again! I was chuffed to find just one single pear on the tree we planted about three years ago, everything comes to those that wait as they they say. The plum trees are laden and we had a discussion about trying to get to the greengages before the birds and wasps, because they are so incredibly sweet, nature is far more aware of the ripeness of them before we are and it is a race to see who notices first.

Our eldest daughter and her boyfriend looked after the farm while we were away, I was very thankful to see that they had done a good few jobs for us, strimming, mowing, and servicing the tractor, brilliant, thanks guys the front entrance looks so much better without all the weeds!

The second round of jobs on my list today was to clean out the chickens, well a couple of the runs anyway, not quite up to doing them all in one hit yet. The gold laced orpingtons were my first target and although I sprayed the hut before going away the red mite are still rife, this is not good news, they are proving so difficult to control this Summer. One of the hens died last week, partly because they had been brooding for a while and that saps all their energy especially if like mine they won’t eat or drink for nearly three weeks, and partly because the mites are staging a second attack on their blood supply! Mites come out at night from the dark crevices and suck the blood from the chickens so keeping them under control is vital, I dispute the fact the you can completely eradicate them as they can be dormant for months. I know they are rife because you can see them crawling up the bucket to which I emptied the old nesting material into, so I promptly burnt all the bedding and then had to spray the hut again, as well as my shoes and the cleaning equipment. I looked on my sleeve and they were crawling up my arm, I am still itching now, I bet you are too, glad I am back aren’t ya lol!

When you see something everyday you don’t notice the change in it or them but having been away for a couple of days I noticed that the lambs have got quite big now, I was beginning to think they were stunted but thankfully not, I suppose measuring them against the two older ewes does not help much as they are always going to be smaller! Looking at them now it won’t be long before we are making preparations for their final journey, the idea is to wind down as much as possible for the Winter months, we may have a great winter but experience has taught us to prepare for the worst and anything better than that is a bonus. The chicken numbers will also be reduced by then and the plan is to have just two pens to look after instead of seven, sounds like a good plan to me. The chickens are still not laying enough eggs, it didn’t take long for them to go off lay but it sure is taking ages for them to come back, just three weeks ago we had around sixteen dozen eggs sitting on the side and now we are barely picking up a dozen a day, come on girls, pull your fingers out we have desperate customers!

As mentioned I have an abundance of cucumbers if you want any, there are dozens more coming along behind them as well, Dad was telling me about cucumber gin, might have to give it a go. The pumpkins are enormous too ( quick muse: if only i knew how to turn them into coaches) as are the spaghetti squash, they have all obviously loved the weather patterns more than we have, I am not quite sure why we worry so much about getting the planting in and cosseting them, they seem to have taken care of themselves very well!

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Posted in Friesland Farm

Still here!

Sorry it’s been a couple of weeks since the last blog, I am still struggling on a day to day basis with this wretched illness, whatever it is, hopefully get some answers tomorrow at the hospital and with luck some wonder drugs!

I am still managing on the whole to get round and do the feeding and watering, then a bit of tidying up then a sleep usually so that I have some energy for later on in the day. Hubby has been a tremendous help as has my Mum, she has been coming over and helping to keep the garden up together, picking veg and hoeing and tidying, it would look a bit of a mess by now if she didn’t!

The fruit and veg are in abundance now and we are selling plenty at the farm gate, the egg numbers took a bit of a dive this week from, 60 a day down to12, I had noticed that the feed had changed colour and shape and wonder if something went wrong in the processing plant as the new bag I opened this morning seems back to normal, fingers crossed the egg count comes back up quickly before we lose too many customers.

The sheep are continuing to munch away in the paddock, they must be growing but as I see them on a daily basis I can’t really tell. We have had to keep the fly spraying up in this weather and luckily so far not had fly strike even though one of the lambs had scour there were no sign of maggots. The red mite in the chicken huts is a different story however, I have been spraying every three days but they are rife with the humid weather, very difficult to bring under control even with the strong chemical sprays, just have to keep doing it until we win I suppose.

We have had a bit of a change over with the horses, the little Shetland has now been sold on to a new home that is going to do some inhand showing with him, he will get more exercise and handling than he did here and hopefully he will be happy. That meant Jack needed a new companion and so we have Maddy on loan, she is a 15h gypsy cob and she is a unit! We will be able to ride her once she has been bought back into work as she has not been ridden for a couple of years. She is a very sociable horse and likes people so if you come up just call over the gate and she comes for a bit if a stroke and a chat.

Sadly I have not been up to making any jam yet or anything else for that matter, I keep hoping each day I wake up, I will feel better but it’s not happening, there are plenty of jobs on the farm that are just getting left at the minute but none that won’t wait until I feel up to it. Our produce is not going to waste though what we don’t sell either gets fed to the chickens or we juice it and drink it fresh, we decided to juice after watching a programme and we are enjoying doing it, even the veg juice is not so bad once you get used to it, today we have orange, celery and carrot as the veg juice and a combination of fruits for the fruit one, the pulp gets fed to the chickens as well so no waste there either.

At the moment we are picking, cucumber, courgettes (lots), carrots, beet root, rhubarb, mange tout, purple sprouting, raspberries and the beginnings of the runner beans which are always very popular, I have also been digging up a few potatoes and selling those. The onions are not far off ripening as well as the garlic. The only things that are lagging behind at the moment are the tomatoes and peppers oh and the melons are pretty non existent despite the hot weather we had. Most of the products are available on a daily basis in the shed but if you want a veg bag made up for a fiver send me a message and we can do that for you.

Posted in Friesland Farm

July, what a scorcher!

I haven’t blogged for a couple of weeks, I am still feeling poorly, still doing the bare minimum and in truth, can’t be arsed!

The weather, as glorious as it is, is a bit of a bind for me, but I am not complaining, nicer to have heat than freezing cold or wet mud! It just means that I have to get up uber early to get the animals done before the Sun comes round, that would not normally be a problem but with the aches and pains I have it makes life more of a struggle, I have a phone appointment with the Doc tomorrow and she will hopefully be able to give me some answers from the blood tests.

Meanwhile on the farm, everything is tickling along the animals are enjoying the Sunshine, I have had to double up on their water as the temperatures are up at 30 degrees out in the open most days. As long as they have shade and water they should be fine. The veg garden as you can imagine needs a lot of watering, another reason why I get up early, the evening Sun is full on the veg patch so watering then is futile. I have taken to leaving the water on overnight but that is not alway successful, this morning the stand was leaning over which stops the top rotating and so just watering one area, how long for, who knows!
The veg themselves are romping along now though, I have no idea why I worried as they have caught up beautifully, the spaghetti squash are looking impressive, and the courgettes are becoming abundant, the strawberries seem never ending and need picking every day and the gooseberries and black currants are nearly ready to pick. Gardening, and nature is definitely about a month behind though, I noticed that the June drop from the apple trees, did not happen until well into the first week of July.

Yesterday afternoon I sat in the shade in the garden for an hour or so, it was lovely to just sit and enjoy watching the birds flying about, the Red Kite soaring high in the sky and watching the cows in the next field happily munching away, the idyll, slightly ruined by the idiots out ‘full throttling’ up the lane on their bikes, no wonder they are an endangered species!
We actually saw a little owl the other evening, we have been here for nearly five years, seen the silhouette of it on the wing at dusk and heard it calling but that is the first time I have ever seen it sat on the fence, little bundle of gorgeousness it was.

The next four months are ‘abundant’ in the gardening world and I often wonder how many ways you can use the excess fruit and veg, well we have decided to juice, it is definitely more healthy to eat fruit like that than in a stodgy pudding, the veg juice, not so great but very beneficial and it means you intake much more than you normally would so the benefits are obvious, we are hoping it will improve our overall energy levels at the very least.

For now my energy levels are poor, I must look up, sleeping sickness and see what that is lol, whatever it is, is slowly getting better but it is slow, I keep waiting for the morning I wake up and leap out of bed, mind you that would be a miracle as I have not done that in years!!

Posted in Friesland Farm

The bare minimum!

Over the last week, I have literally done the bare minimum, get up, feed, water and sort eggs, then spend the days on the sofa! I came down with a bug which alternated between violent shivering and sweating profusely, my muscles had nothing in them to give and so I relented and just rested in between feed sessions. At first I resisted but in the end thought, my body is telling me something and so I listened, I am feeling much better this week although still got a couple of aches and pains in my joints but nothing a couple of paracetamol can’t sort out.

The weather has not been very inspiring, it is still cold in the evenings, I can’t ever recall a summer as chilly as this one although I am sure the records would reveal otherwise. As a consequence, the veg growth is very slow, I have managed to pick some new potatoes, carrots and mange tout from the poly tunnel but nothing on the scale we would normally be picking. I keep hoping there will be something to sell out in the little shed but it is sadly lacking at the moment. We have had a good few bowls of strawberries but they are not as sweet as I would expect them to be, still pretty good with some sugar, cream and a splash of balsamic vinegar though which is my favourite way to eat them.

We have eggs in abundance, and today’s task is to try and find something to do with them all, these are mostly smaller eggs from the pullets that have just started laying, customers, given the choice, naturally go for the bigger eggs and so the small ones get left over and over again. I now have a good few dozen sat on the side and I really don’t want to waste them, there is only so much scrambled egg or omelette one can eat in a week. Hubby does not like quiche or egg puddings or custard so it is difficult to come up with something. I may just bake quiche and freeze them for an occasion such as birthdays, we have plenty of those in our family, maybe individual little ones then I can eat them for lunch. I could use the yolks for lemon curd and the whites for meringues but Hubby does not eat those either, I think I need to swap the Hubster really for someone less fussy!

We had a rare and much needed day out yesterday, our middle daughters, Boyfriends dad is a member of the 2013 Great Britain rifle team and yesterday they had a friends and family day at the National Shooting Range in Bisley. Hubby, daughters boyfriend and his brother took part in shooting various arms including the old fashioned muskets which they thoroughly enjoyed. Us girls went along to spectate and it was a great day, the hospitality was fabulous as was the food, the boys got very competitive between them as you would expect, if we get to go again, I would definitely like to have a go at the shooting although the rifles are a bit scary, the noise was phenomenal as there are many ranges all around and guns going off all the time. The actual place was like a snapshot in time, many of the buildings and especially the clubhouses are very colonial and have not changed much in over a hundred years or more, it was lovely, and nice to have entirely new experiences. The rifle team will be off to Canada in August and I wish them good luck and hope they win, they are a lovely bunch even though they brandish lethal weapons lol.

It feels like we are constantly playing a waiting game with the sun, I think we need to change our mind set to use whatever is thrown at us instead as I have heard that this weather pattern is going to be with us for about 10 years! We can either be depressed by the thought or we can get on with it and work with it which is easier said than done I will admit. The one thing you can’t do here is predict the weather accurately though, we are just as likely to prepare for the cold and then have a heat wave or vice versa that’s the difficulty with a temperate climate, so I have given up listening to the forecast and just wait to see what the weather is like when I get up that seems much more sensible than planning in advance. I have to say that for me personally this summer, just like last summer has been great, although I would like a bit of warmth, the sun can stay behind the clouds for as long as it likes, it means I can at least get outside during the middle of the day rather than having to come indoors and clean!

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Our haul for dinner on Saturday, should really be getting much more than this at this time of year but something is better than nothing and it tasted great 🙂