With gratitude enough for the lessons learnt on uphill struggles.
Onwards...'tis the only way.
Elspeth getting into her stride...... |
' wrestling' sheild bugs |
"Don't get me involved in your vegetable dioramas"
Quote from second born son whilst he helps fettle and bag produce for the seasonal markets; I get diverted by just how very distractingly pink chard stalks can be; and request that he pass me a slightly smaller bud, for my pictorial tomfoolery.
Apparently the abundant sprout crop isn't entirely down to my consummate skill as a grower. This August's weather is more likely the main cause. So sorry kids; there are going to be plenty everywhere...Mmm.
A two day yoga sojourn in Bristol coming up for me.
Might not be some people's.direct equivalent of a 'lie down in a darkened room', for the mentally stretched.....
But I would disagree. Being a student, is tantamount to a luxury break for anyone in the bad habit taking on too much....Someone else being in charge; no expectations; lovely.
Fret not; small farming has not been totally abandoned in favour of other outdoor pursuits.
Here Girl Monday #1 makes herself very popular with the girls; newly liberated onto fresh ground, and always glad of some corn to scratch for.
It has to be healthier for the birds to get new forage; and be displaced from their own detritus every few weeks.
It took us less than an hour to move the hens and their house this morning; including taking down then re erecting their netting fences.
Leaving more time for the never ending; self perpetuating job of salad weeding. Natures way of keeping us out of mischief...
Despite having plenty of her own self generated fun to hand; GM has been helping me for the majority of monday mornings for the last twelve years. Not least; by engaging in the kind of conversation that makes three hours fly by.
Soon I will show you what she does with some of her time when she's not busy with horticultural hi jinks here.
Suspense aplenty....
On an unseasonably warm December day like this; all I really want to do is ride my bicycle.
The oaks still have their leaves on; these linearly aligned ones were once part of a Devon hedge bank; it's since been let go; and the trampling cattle have worn the soil down; so the exposed roots look like gnarled fingers gripping the earth.
The temptation is just to keep rolling on...
I realise it is almost exactly thirty years to the week since I first arrived to work and live in this valley; the plan was to move on after a years work experience. But plans are of course what we make; whilst life happens to us...
Not such a dreadful place to get stuck I think you'll agree.
And I've been cycling up and down this lane for work and pleasure ever since; and herded sheep; bedded sows; tended vegetables; and made hay in many of the fields besides it; along the way.
I did have a reasonable reason to be out whilst right hand Wednesday girl was industriously harvesting the Cavello Nero.....Apparently the blood test shows amongst other things; that I have the kidneys of a twenty year old...
A good thing; one hopes....Or was the doctor suggesting I might like to lay off the ale??
And you can breathe easy now; the balmy temperatures; and the rain in abeyance meant that I did get those last few handfuls of ryecorn tickled into the old pig ground...The corvids hadn't found all of it.
Ardha Chandrasana.... Top arm should be vertical.... |
Trikonasana... Triangle posture..Strenghtens; lengthens; opens; and realigns...Puts your bones back where they should be... |
Taken almost exactly a year ago...Yes I am very tall....
Attendees at Landworkers Alliance meeting this weekend were mostly young, clearsighted, intelligent, well educated sorts; all of whom have experienced the joys of endlessly weeding leeks in the rain; and other associated bucolic blissfullness....
Yet they are still keen to get on with realising their ambitions of, making a sustainabiy scaled, environmentally benign living, from producing decent, affordable food, for folk in their locality.
But the barriers to them achieving those aims; in this age of the ever increasing commodification of land and food production; are possibly even more insurmountable now; than when the pictured plot was purchased; with the same intentions.
Back then, nearly ten years ago it was a featureless pasture field; most likely destined for 'horseyculture' not food growing..
After an amount of work; and some investment of energy, time, and money, it is starting to shape up as a viable small farm...
So it might be time for me to step up; as someone who could be regarded as an 'old hand' (eeek) to join the ranks of those campaigning on behalf of the new generation.
Those keen; energetic (and crazy) enough to take on the task of feeding the country properly, need encouragement.
Multiple studies have shown that smaller farms are more productive overall per acre. And employ more people...
But policy documents? (gulp) Position papers?(arrghh) European consultations, and lobbying? Well maybe......
Those girls and boys certainly do furnish a decent nosh; and knees up.......And not a knitted knicker; or whittled spoon; in sight...
The view from the hill helpfully hides at least two thirds of the workload behind the windbreak of Italian Alders...Nitrogen fixers plus potential firewood..
But it's starting to feel like a few things are getting under control...
Ha; what a statement to make...
Control is a hopeless word; for a situation where it's far more about keeping the plates spinning; and trusting that natural processes will continue to do their thing.
All we can do, is to encourage natural flows to go towards where we would like them.
"Working with nature" is an much over used; nebulous; means nothing; and yet means everything term...
At least in the world of organics; and general 'Greenery'.
It presupposes that we even know, how nature really does work....Mysterious ways muchly....
Good solid science can tell us a lot.
But there's still an awful amount of research yet to be done around understanding how something as seemingly mundane; yet complex and life sustaining, as soil, actually fuctions.
In a healthy loam there are a myriad microscopic organisms; plus associated buglets; endlessly interacting; and producing and consuming micronutrients, and minerals.
Then there are multiple soil types; climatic conditions; crops that can be grown..
How do you set up empirical tests for all that? In each and every situation?
And who is going to fund all that research?
When at the end of it all there is no actual marketable product; or magic bullet to sell to us organic growers...?
And even if a sustainable one were to be found; could we afford to use it?
For now; and I suspect in the longer term;, we just have to trust our instincts; whilst making best use of that experience and knowledge we, and others may have garnered over the years...
And of course keep on larding on the love; and compost....