In the last ten days or so since my
last update it's been pretty busy. It started with our first working
weekend. This time we had one family visiting, thanks Ben, Anna and
kids for coming. We had a fantastic weekend. Saturday started with a
“Room on the Broom” kiddie fun session at Beverley Minster which
they all loved. Luckily in the afternoon there were jobs that needed
doing in the polytunnel as the heavy rain didn't make it tempting to
do much else. Nearly all the plants in the polytunnel now have extra
fleece protection for Frosty nights. The combination of fleece and
the polytunnel plastic should keep the frost away. Sunday we set to
with compost heap creating using old pallets. We made a good few,
filled several in with compost and then using our new (well new to us
it was my Grandfathers) tractor/mower collected loads of horse manure
from our neighbours who have horses. We were really pleased with the
weekend and are going to try some again in the future.
The Monday afterwards the Sheep
arrived. Having them delivered was quite a saga. The sheep we wanted
were in the field next door along with a load of other sheep. So
Steve (who owns them) and another guy turned up about lunch time in
the cold weather and we all set too. First we herded all the sheep
out of Steve's field and onto the dead end section of road. Once we
had them collected there Steve shaked his food bucket and lead them
down the road and into our area of hardstanding at the entrance to
the field. They were sort of trapped in there although not all of the
fencing was sheep proof so we had to be quite careful. Then with aid
of some sheep hurdles we corralled them into a corner. Once there
they were wormed and checked. Our sheep were selected and guided one
at a time by the horns (They weren't to keen on that) into the
prepared field. We then had to herd the rest back into Steve's field
and I somehow managed to leave one behind in the road (oops). We got
it in the end though. So we now have our sheep. Two Ewe's and two
castrated Rams. A fully in tact Ram will visit in late November for
“Tupping” and then hopefully we will have lambs in the Spring. If
the Ram visits Late November then we should get lambs late April. The
sheep are a little nervous but getting more tame every day. They
don't need feeding but we tend to go in every day with a little feed
just to get closer to them and get them tamer. This should make
checking them nice and easy. We now need to put some fencing across
the rest of the field to protect the vegetables and polytunnel from
them. At the moment they are in a smaller fenced off area.
As well as all of this we have had
Christine and Kevin's wedding, Imogens 6th birthday and
party. Immy's party finished with a tractor ride and the tractor
pulling a trailer with twelve or so kiddies in. It was all going so
well until I managed to get a puncture. On the home front the Kitchen
is almost there. Last bit of woodwork is going on tomorrow then
hopefully I'll do the final touches this week. It's all fully
operational now though.
As a matter of interest we are now just
(but only just) outside the current bird flu restriction zone.
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